Here is one that American Renaissance are probably are not covering – you know, East Asian IQ are just sooooooooo big – China aims to catch up to the US by continuing to steal military tech, and anything else not nailed down. The big question is how the US could let this happen, even before the CCP had their man in the White House. Could the massive number of Chinese nationals placed within the research infrastructure of the US, drunk upon diversity and multiracialism, have anything to do with it? China does not permit a parallel situation.
“China is racing to catch up to the military superiority of the United States, and it’s doing so by beefing up domestic innovation efforts in tandem with ongoing intellectual property theft efforts, according to a recent think tank report.
At the same time, the military arm of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is hindered by both the trappings of a socialist command economy and an inability to develop cutting-edge technology on its own, according to the RAND Corporation report (pdf) “Defense Acquisition in Russia and China.”
“China’s reliance on intellectual property theft means its weapons are years behind, but the Chinese recognize that shortcoming and are investing in and growing organic capabilities through joint ventures and acquisition of foreign technology,” the report reads.
The report, drafted for the U.S. Army, outlines how China is moving away from its standard model of copying other countries.
“Overall, the PLA [People’s Liberation Army] has overcome many technological barriers and is the clear pacing threat to the United States in defense acquisitions,” it reads.
Theft and Acquisition
The Chinese innovation model for years has been to steal and replicate, which the RAND authors refer to as the “copy-replace model.” Many divisions of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) are armed with replicates of other nations’ weaponry.
The report notes that Chinese aircraft bear striking similarities to their U.S. and Russian counterparts. Among the list of potential replicates is the Chinese J-31 Gyrfalcon, which resembles the American F-35 Lightning II.
Another jet, known as the J-20 Mighty Dragon, is similar to the American F-22 Raptor. But according to the report, despite the J-20 going through relatively quick development, the report estimates that China is as far as 20 years behind the United States in military aviation.
On the ground, the PLA’s domestically produced standard service rifle of roughly the last 25 years, the QBZ-95, may soon be replaced by a copied model. The replacement, which is unofficially known as the QBZ-191, is a near copy of the Heckler and Koch 416, according to analysis from The Firearm Blog. This rifle is also strikingly similar to an AR-15.
The CCP’s “reliance on theft of intellectual property for its weapon development has helped keep it competitive but has pegged it several years behind the cutting edge,” according to the report. This has led China to increase efforts in its own research and development.
Innovation
China’s domestic military spending has been on the rise in recent decades, and its approach to innovation has been met with a paradigm shift in recent years.
“Chinese military expenditures grew tenfold in constant dollars over the past 25 years, with spending reaching an all-time high of $250 billion in 2018,” the report reads.
By comparison, the United States had a defense budget of $700 billion that same year.
Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s takeover of the CCP in 2012 led to several systemic changes in the PLA’s weapon development strategy. Since 2016, the military and commercial sectors have become more closely integrated. Military designs are often contracted out to civilian, albeit state-owned, companies.
“For a sense of scale, of the top 22 highest-grossing defense firms worldwide, nine are from the United States and eight are from China,” the report reads.
Chinese salaries for project managers and engineers are also becoming competitive with the United States. This further serves to lure Chinese nationals attending universities abroad back home.
Almost all Chinese students began living abroad after graduating in 2000. By 2016, nearly 65 percent of Chinese students had returned to China.
Money and theft aren’t able to solve all of China’s development problems.
“The PLA is still struggling to spur domestic innovation and close the gap on a few glaring technical deficiencies, such as high-end chips, silent submarines, and aircraft engines,” the report reads.
The RAND authors highlight internal impediments stemming from the political structure of communism.
“Even as it strives to clear these technical hurdles, the PLA must address the institutional inefficiencies and barriers related to management and quality assurance that continue to frustrate its efforts at reform,” the report reads.
Many Chinese businesses’ internal hierarchies are based on the duration of employment and personal relationships, rather than meritocracy. Despite large numbers of students returning to the country, many existing Chinese companies fail to effectively integrate returning talent, the report states, citing ineffective management practices.
“The design of Chinese defense contracts also does little to encourage transparency and accountability,” the report reads.
The language in contracts is vague, contract winners are guaranteed a share of profits on top of costs, and low bidders for contracts are given consolation projects. These vestiges of the command economy result in little to no incentive to innovate, according to the report.”