Saturday, July 08, 2017

Professional research report of the day: Overview of People's Liberation Army Air Force "Elite Pilots"

http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_reports/RR1400/RR1416/RAND_RR1416.pdf


Research Questions

    What can Chinese primary sources tell us about how the PLAAF selects and trains what it regards as its elite fighter pilots?

    What makes elite fighter pilots different than other pilots in the PLAAF?

    How does the PLAAF use domestic competitions (such as the Golden Helmet and Golden Dart) and international competition (such as the Aviadarts in Russia) to showcase the PLAAF's desire to project a more open and confident image at home and abroad?




This report uses Chinese primary sources to provide an overview of how the Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) selects and trains what it calls its elite fighter pilots. The PLAAF identifies three groups of pilots as elite pilots. The first comprises 33 pilots who have won the annual Golden Helmet competition at the Dingxin Test and Training Base in Gansu province since 2011; the Golden Helmet is "the supreme contest among Chinese fighter pilots." The second group comprises pilots who belong to the PLAAF's Bayi Aerobatics Team, created in 1962. The third comprises six Su-30 attack pilots, including one Golden Helmet winner, who competed in Russia's Aviadarts 2014 competition for the first time. While each of the three groups competes using existing flight procedures, the lessons learned are reviewed extensively for ways to change existing tactics and combat methods. For example, one of the most important lessons learned has been the PLAAF's desire to move toward less scripted training, which Chinese sources typically refer to as "unrestricted air combat" or "free air combat" training. Official Chinese media reports on the PLAAF's Golden Helmet competition, its participation in the Russian Aviadarts competition, and the Bayi Aerobatics Team's participation in air shows in Russia in 2013 and Malaysia in 2015 appear to reflect a desire on the part of the PLAAF to project a more open and confident image at home and abroad. In 2014, the PLAAF implemented a Golden Dart competition to identify elite ground attack and bomber crews.
Key Findings
Elite Pilots Consist of Three Groups of Pilots in the PLAAF

    The first group comprises winners of the annual Golden Helmet competition, which began in 2011.
    The second group comprises pilots who participated in the Aviadarts international military aviation competition in 2014.
    The third group comprises pilots who are members of the PLAAF's Bayi Aerobatics Team.
    The PLAAF's emphasis on the development of fighter "tactics" and "combat methods" and its approach to developing these three groups of elite pilots signifies its determination to pursue further professionalization and enhance the competence of its pilots.
    This professionalization and enhancement of competence is no less important to the PLAAF than the modernization of its aircraft, weapons, and equipment.

Recommendation

    Future research should continue to trace the PLAAF's refinement of its "tactics" and "combat methods" and how China plans to continue to cultivate its elite pilots.

Table of Contents

    Chapter One

    Introduction

    Chapter Two

    The PLAAF's Cangzhou and Dingxin Test and Training Bases

    Chapter Three

    The PLAAF's Golden Helmet Competition

    Chapter Four

    The PLAAF Participation in Aviadarts and Bayi Aerobatics Team Participation in International Air Shows

    Chapter Five

    Conclusion and Questions for Future Research






Sunday, June 25, 2017

Photos of the day: J-10B preparing for the "Aviadarts 2017" military competition

The competition will be held from July 29 to August 12 this year in China, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia.

























YJ-91 Anti-radiation missile

Just in case you are wondering, that is a YJ-91 Ramjet Anti-radiation missile mounting on a J-10A as featured in the movie "Sky Hunter"

YJ-91 is based on the Russian Kh-31, capable of Mach 4.5, tailored for the Chinese "Wild Weasel" A.K.A "Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses", or SEAD missions. 



Here are two YJ-91 on a non-movie JH-7A fighter bomber. 


Communist propaganda of the day: "Sky Hunter" China's latest dog-fight acrobatics flick

Starting Fan Bingbing, you know that Transformer and X-men girl.












Friday, July 07, 2017

Baby sister needs attention too!!

People all over the internet are drooling over "Sixteen Candles" starting Molly Ringwald in Hong Kong. Hey now,  her baby sister, miss seventeen, needs attention too!!  Come on people!







Miss seventeen in Qingdao, 7/7/2017





Professional PLA article of the day: Recent Developments in the Chinese Army’s Helicopter Force

Recent Developments in the Chinese Army’s Helicopter Force
Publication: China Brief Volume: 17 Issue: 8
By: Dennis J. Blasko



Dennis J. Blasko, Lieutenant Colonel, U.S. Army (Retired), is a former U.S. army attaché to Beijing and Hong Kong and author of The Chinese Army Today (Routledge, 2006).


June 9, 2017 09:43 AM 
https://jamestown.org/program/recent-developments-chinese-armys-helicopter-force/

Update: Since the publication of this article, Chinese reporting on the Army Aviation brigades in the new 74th and 75th Group Armies indicates that the 74th GA has been formed around units primarily from the former 42nd GA, not the 41st as previously reported, and the 75th GA has taken over units from the former 41st GA, instead of the 42nd.
In November 2016, Chinese internet sources showed photos of a ceremony in the (former) 13th Group Army of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Army accepting the 1,000th helicopter into the force (NetEase, May 23). This nice round number demonstrates the growth of the Army Aviation Corps over the past decade. Along with Special Operations Forces (SOF), Army Aviation is one of the “new-type combat forces” given priority for development. The increase in the number of Army helicopters accompanies the expansion of the force in the latest round of reforms. [1] In roughly a month’s time, half of all Army Aviation units have experienced some sort of organizational change. However, even as the numbers of helicopters rise, the size of the Army Aviation force is still small for a ground force that will probably number around a million personnel by 2020. [2] The recent changes are an attempt to improve and expand a force that underpins a number of important capabilities from tactical mobility and special operations to logistics support.

For rest of the article, please visit Jamestown (here)





Photos of the day: The chopper unit "formerly known as" the 7th LH Brigade, 26th Group Army



Soldiers assigned to an army aviation brigade of the PLA 80th Group Army conduct pre-flight inspections on the Z-10 attack helicopters prior to the flight training at a military airfield in east China's Shandong Province on July 2, 2017. (eng.chinamil. Com.cn/Photo by Li Qiguang and Shi Shuailei)











Correcting the internet -- The 130mm Naval Gun installed on Type 052D destroyer is Type H/PJ 45A, not Type H/PJ38

Pointing my finger at Wiki (here).   In addition to type designation, they also got designed and manufactured sources wrong. 

Type: H/PJ45A-130-I
Manufacture Date: Jan 2014
Serial number: 2013002   Weight: 32.388T
Designed by: China Shipbuilding Industry Corp no 713 Research Institute
Manufactured by:  China North Industries Group Corporation Factory 447




Saturday, July 01, 2017

PLA orbat update (July 1st 2017)

Special Thanks to Andrew KC for the update. 

- The 127th Division of the former 54th GA has been split up into 2 brigades.  One of them is the 127th Combined-Arms Brigade and is based upon the old 379th Mechanized Regiment. 

-  The former 132nd Motorized Infantry Brigade, Hainan MD, Guangzhou MR is now the 132nd Combined-Arms Brigade (合成第132旅) of the 74th GA

 - The 188th Mechanized Infantry Brigade of the former 27th GA is now the 188th Combined Arms Brigade (合成第188旅) of the 82nd GA.



PLA orbat update (71st, 72nd and 73rd Group Armies)


Theater Command
Old DesignationNew DesignationLine Units





Eastern TC
12th Group Army71st Group Army2nd Combined-Arms Brigade




35th Combined-Arms Brigade




160th Combined-Arms Brigade




178th Combined-Arms Brigade




179th Combined-Arms Brigade




235th Combined-Arms Brigade







1st Group Army72nd Group Army5th Combined-Arms Brigade




10th Combined-Arms Brigade




34th Combined-Arms Brigade




85th Combined-Arms Brigade




90th Combined-Arms Brigade




124th Combined-Arms Brigade







31st Group Army73rd Group Army3rd Combined-Arms Brigade




14th Combined-Arms Brigade




86th Combined-Arms Brigade




91st Combined-Arms Brigade




92nd Combined-Arms Brigade




163th Combined-Arms Brigade





Southern TC
41st Group Army74th Group Army


42nd Group Army75th Group Army


14th Group ArmyDecommissioned





Western TC
21st Group Army76th Group Army


13rd Group Army77th Group Army


47th Group ArmyDecommissioned





Northern TC
16th Group Army78th Group Army


39th Group Army79th Group Army


26th Group Army80th Group Army


40th Group ArmyDecommissioned





Central TC
65th Group Army81st Group Army


38th Group Army82nd Group Army


54th Group Army83rd Group Army


20th Group ArmyDecommissioned


27th Group ArmyDecommissioned

Saturday, June 24, 2017

PLA Orbat reform update (Jun 2017)

The "Great PLA Orbat Reform" of the 2017 is still on-going, here is what we know thus far.   Please note that some units are being merged together in a two-to-one fashion, others are shifted to a different Group Army HQ altogether.

Credit goes to Andrew KC.


-->
Old New


115th Mechanized Infantry Brigade, 39th Group Army, Shanyang Military Region115th Combined-Arms Brigade (合成第115旅), 78th Group Army, Northern Theater Command
200th Mechanized Infantry Brigade, 26th Group Army, Jinan Military Region200th Combined-Arms Brigade (合成第200旅), 79th Group Army. Central Theater Command
3rd Armored Brigade, 39th Group Army, Shanyang Military Region
202nd Mechanized Infantry Brigade, 39th Group Army, Shangyang Military Region
(a two-to-one merger)
202nd Combined-Arms Brigade (合成第202旅), 78th Group Army, Northern Theater Command
203rd Infantry Brigade, 39th Group Army, Shanyang Military Region203rd Combined-Arms Brigade (合成第203旅), 80th Group Army, Northern Theater Command
4th Armored Brigade, 16th Group Army, Shanyang Military Region
204th Mechanized Infantry Brigade, 16th Group Army, Shanyang Military Region
(a two-to-one merger)
204th Combined-Arms Brigade (合成第204旅), 78th GA, Northern Theater Command
115th Mechanized Infantry Brigade, 39th Group Army, Shanyang Military Region115th Combined-Arms Brigade (合成第115旅), 78th Group Army, Northern Theater Command
7th Artillery Brigade, 39th Group Army, Shanyang Military Region79th Artillery Brigade (炮兵第79旅), 79th Group Army, Theater Command
18th Armored Brigade, 14th Group Army, Chengdu Military Region18th Combined Arms Brigade (合成第18旅), 75th Group Army, Southern Theater Command
SpOp Brigade, 16th Group Army, Shanyang Military Region 78th Special Combat Brigade (特种作战第78旅), 78th Group Army, Northern Theater Command
34th Mechanized Infantry Brigade, 12th Group Army, Nanjing Military Region 34th Combined Arms Brigade (合成第34旅), 72nd Group Army, Eastern Theater Command
3rd Motorized Infantry Brigade, 1st Group Army, Nanjing Military Region3rd Combined Arms Brigade (合成第3旅), 73rd Group Army, Eastern Theater Command
112th Mechanized Infantry Division, 38th Group Army, Beijing Military Region112th Mechanized Infantry Division, a strategic unit organic to Central Theater Command
116th Mechanized Infantry Division, 39th Group Army, Shangyang Military Region116th Mechanized Infantry Division, a strategic unit organic to Northern Theater Command


Thursday, May 18, 2017


PLA's new Group Army Orbat

Thanks Forbin for putting this together for us.


Theater Command
Old DesignationNew Designation




Eastern TC
12th Group Army71st Group Army


1st Group Army72nd Group Army


31st Group Army73rd Group Army




Southern TC
41st Group Army74th Group Army


42nd Group Army75th Group Army


14th Group ArmyDecommissioned




Western TC
21st Group Army76th Group Army


13rd Group Army77th Group Army


47th Group ArmyDecommissioned




Northern TC
16th Group Army78th Group Army


39th Group Army79th Group Army


26th Group Army80th Group Army


40th Group ArmyDecommissioned




Central TC
65th Group Army81st Group Army


38th Group Army82nd Group Army


54th Group Army83rd Group Army


20th Group ArmyDecommissioned


27th Group ArmyDecommissioned