JPRS ID: 9957 CHINA REPORT POLITICAL, SOCIOLOGICAL AND MILITARY AFFAIRS

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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFI('IAL USF. ONI.Y JPRS L/9957 3 September 1981 Cl~ina ort p POLITICAL, SOCIOIOGICAI AND MILItARY AFFAIRS CFOUO 14/81) FB~$ FOREICN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400450007-5 NOTE . JPRS publications contain information primarily from foreign newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreign-language sources are translated; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets are supplied by JPRS. Prccessing indicators such as [TextJ or [Excerpt] in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original information was processed. G~ere no processing indicator is given, the infor- mation was summarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are er.closed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- - tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear in the original but have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes within the body of an item originate with the source. Times within items are as given by source. , The contents of this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or at:~itudes of the U.S. Government. COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF MATERIALS REPRODUCED HERF.IN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-00850R040400050047-5 JPRS L/9957 3 September 1981 CHINA REPQRT POLITICAL, SOCIOLOGICAL AND MILITARY AFFAIRS (FOUO 14/81) ~ CONTENTS MILITAItY AND PL~LIC SECURITY (hina'a Vietnam Veta Attend Nan~ing Advanced Infantry School (Yang Genrong; JIEFANG.TIA~T BAO, 1 May 79) 1 Wuhan Tank Battalion Experiments in Multigrade Training (Ruang 7ttao~ian, et al. ; JIEFANGTZAd BAO; 9 May 79) 2 Relationahip Between Comananders, Subordinates Discussed (Pei Din$ean; JIEFANGTUN BAO, 25 May 79) 7 ~.gitation, Propag~da Help Maintain Figh##ng Spirit (7.hao Gengqun; JIEFANGJiAd BAO, 27 May 79)...0 .............o..... 10 Shenyang Arary Hoepital Ad~pte New Clinical Techno~ogy (Guo Jindong, et al.; JIEFANGJUN BAO, 27 May 79) 14 Bei~ing Un{ t Carries Out Combined-Arms Tratning (Zhang Meimng, Huang Yuaheng; JIEFANGTUN BAiO, 27 May 79)....... 16 Study of New Weapon Technology, Combat Methoda Urged (Bing Yan; JIEFANGTtiN BAO, 9 Apr 7Q) ......................r..... 17 Articles Extol Flight Heroee i.n Border Defense (JIEFANG.T~T BAO, 9 Apr 79).....~ 22 Heroic Air Defenee Commander, by Pan Zongde Mechanic Enaurea Flight Safety, by Jin Shi~un, Deng Xudong . Patrol Aircraft Extra Alert, by Cai Shanwu, Liu Changdong Cargo Plane Crew Al.ert Saga af Yotmg Soldier's Sacrifice for Irbtherland (Liu Liangkai, et a1.; JIEFANGJUN BAO, 9 Apr 79} 25 - a - [III - CC - 80 FOUO] FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE O~iLY Youth Exhorted To Be Model Defenders of Motherland (Wu Zhang; JIEFANGJUN BAO, 9 Apr 79) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Soldier Suggests Improvements in Tsctics, Equipment (Lo; JIEFANGJiIl~1 BAO, 9 Apr 79) ..................................0 29 - - b - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONiY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400450007-5 " FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY MILITARY AND PUBLIC SEC~ktITY CI~LCNA' S VIETNAM VETS ATTEND NANJING ADVANCED INFANTRY SCHOOL Beijing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chineae 1 May '79 p 1 [Article by Yang Genrong [2799 2704 2837]: "Nearly 100 Outstanding Cadres Enter the Nan~ing Advanced Infantry School"] [Text] Beginning on 15 April, 93 cadres from the Guangxi Border Troops _ have arrived one after another at the Nan~ing Adva,nced Infantry School for study. Among these out$tanding caamna,nders tempered in the self-defensive counterattack are some military cadres who led "d~gger" companies in bravely penetrating the ene~y lines and who directed one decisive victory after another in the battles of Tong Deng [Chinese pronunci:ation: 0681 4098] and Lang Son; some political cadres who always set a personal example in promptly and forcefully carrying out political work during the battle; and same leading logistics cadres who fear neither hardship nor death and who did an outstanding ~ob of completing battle supply tasks. Amon~ the 93 students are 50 who have been cited for battlefield service. The arrival of this batch of students has given the school brave deeds and battle experience for developing in-depth study of the self-defensive countera.ttack battles. This has raiaed the quality of instruction and provided extremely beneficial factor s . The CCP comnnittee of the Nan~ing Advanced Infei.ntry School has attached great importance to this batch of new students entering the school. .They drew up a resolution cn atudying the brave deeds and experiences in the battle of self-defense and counterattack, calling on the per�sonnel of the school to study seriously the lofty patriotiam and revolutionaxy heroic spirit of the troops who pexticipated in battle, study the valuable experience in ~ doin~ battle which was paid for with blood, to utilize this experience thoroughly in reforming instruction, to strive to train outstanding command- ers and to greatly advance all items of work with instruction at the core. 11723 CSO: 4005~2095 ~ 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY NLILITARY AP1~i PUBLIC SECURITY WUHAN TANK SATTALION EXPF~RIMENTS IN MULTIGRADE TRAIIVING Rei~ing JIEFANGJIIN BAO in Chinese 9 May 79 p 1 [Article by Kuang Zhao~ian ~2568 0664 1.c].7], Liu Jinzhang [0~;91 6855 45451, G~~o Chuangxing [6753 0482 5281] and Han Baoqing j7281 5508 7230J, "Ref'orm the Educational System, Raise the Quality of Training"] [Text] This newspaper received a great deal of response after - we published the experiences of a regiment of units under the ' Nanjing Couanand with a"promotion grade system" of training in our 26 February issue. Many units feel that this tr~ining method is a ma~ar~ refo~m which solves the long-standing problem of putting rookie and veteran soldiers in the same pot and that it helps raise the quality of training. Some comrades, however, ha.ve raised the question of how can we solve the problems oF inadequate teaching personnel, equip- " ment and space if we act like that regiment and train each company in eepsrated cl~ss grades. The l~a 1 tank batt~lion of a certain divieion of the units under the Wuhan Command has experi~ented in ce,rxied out multigrade educ~tion taking the batta)ion aa the educational un3t and solved these pro~~lems relatively well. Here we introduce how they have done this. The No 1 tank battalion is thia year's ~ioneer training test-point battalion in a certain division of the armored force of the units under the Wuhan = Comma,nd. Since the beginning of February, with the assistance of a divisional work team, it ha~ adopted a new teaching system focusing on the battalion and ~oining the battalion and the compe~nies according to the "promotion grade system" me~hod. The quelity of training has improved maxkedly. The "Fromotion Gra.de Syatem" Training Method Carries With It a Reform in the Fd~acational Systam In Januaxy of this year when they were studying �~he training plan far the training test-point battalion~ same comrades put forth the daring prop~sal to carry out training on a specialized basis by sep~~ating higher and lower c:Lasses. Of course this would be very good for solving the problem of putting 2 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 P'OR OFFI Cl. AL U51. ~NLY novice and veteran personnel in the same pot. But it also b~re witn it a new problem. Everyane first counted things up: a tank company has fo~,r kinds of personnel: tank commander, driver, first gunner and second gunner. If each of these has a higher and lower class, that makes eight classes. Yet one tank companv has nine cadres including the quartermaster and in ordinary times at most two-thirds af these are available. The teaching capability is - therefore insufficient to use the company as the teaching unit to carry out multigrade training. In addition, some comrad~s pc~inted out that so many training vehicles would be required for company-level training. In the past when training was divided into four specialized squads there was a chronic p~obl~m in practical operatiaz~s of contending for vehicles and waiting for ~hem. If they split tY~e four squads into eight classes the contradi~tions of contending and waiting for vehicles would become more intense and there � would definitely be insufficien~ training ~ounds and ma.terials as well. What could be done? The division CCP co~ranittee considered the greater interests and after numerous studi~s and deliberations resolved to search out a way via reforming the educational system, changing from one in the past with the company as its basic unit to a multigrade training system organized in a unified way by the battalion. Moreover Assistant Division Commander Chen and Vic~-Com~?~ssar Sheng led separate work teams to first go to the No 1 - battalion of a certain regiment for a trial run. Methods of Implementing tha Organization of Teaching Using the Battalion as the Basic Unit How, concretely, can multigrade training be crganized in a unified manner by the battalion? One, the personnel of the en~ire battalicn are grouped into unified classes. Using the method o~ mass appraisal, review by groups of teaching personnel and examination and approval by the company CCP branch, they grouped the - tank commanders, first gunners and drivers each into higher and lower classes according to time of service, technical ~ade and ability to learn. The second gunnera were groupe~ into one class, making ~ tot~l of seven classes. - 7'hose whose professional techniques were relatively good went to the A classes while thoee whose technic~l level was a little lower or who were rc~ukies went to the B classea. The personnel of each company were ~.5ke scY~oolmatee going to their own clasaes at unified training times to listen t;o lectures or to drill. In the course of training personnel were pzomoted and demoted in grade in keeping with the development of their professional qualities. Two, the teaching personnel of the entire battalion divided up their work in a unified manner. The battalion organized and assigned the cadres and teach- ing personnel of each company in a unified manner. Aiming at the technical specialties of each cadre and his level of teaching responsibility and acting in accordance with the principles of putting the capable in cotrmiand and pairing up the strong and the weak, they put the specialized teAching person- nel of the entire battalion into four instructor gxoups, including 3 FOR OFFICIAL U.SE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R004400054007-5 FUR OFFICIAL USE ONLY communications, gunnery and driving, and separately axranged c;~dres at the levels of battalion and company to a~sume the responsibility of group leader or assistant group leader. On ~ne eve of the training, the four instructor groups divided up the work for the 85 oasic topics and operational topics involved in this year's specialized training. This brought each subject down to +he individual so that each ir~structor understood the topic, contents, time and methods of his own teaching responsibility and there was a pr:~mary teacher and a backup teacher for each topic in order to avoid the situation where there is no one to teach when an instructor leaves. Battalion and regiment cadre experts were invited to teach the nine theoretical topics which w~re relatively difficult. Three, the entire battalion drew up a unified concrete implementing training plan. They organized the battalion's instructors to act in keeping with the monthly plans of the regiment and collectively dre,w up a program for imple- menting the training topics, collectively prepare lessons and examinatians. In drawing up this program they treat groups A and B~eparately according to ti;eir aptitudes. For example, they increased the number of relatively deep topics for dryvers in claes A, including the extended utilization of tanks and basic knowledge for technical appraisal and minor tank repairs. Four, the battalion made unified arrangements for various kinds of training equipment. While the instruction was being carried out, specialized training equipment was all managed and repaired by the battalion and distributed to each class in a unified manner for its use. This not only brought the exist- ing equipment into full play, it also created conditions for ~oint specialized training. Five, the battalion and the companies ~oin with both divisian and joining. Whi1e the bPttalion organizes specialized basic training and education in a unified manner, the eompany cadres cooperate on their own initiative and orp,anize the soldiera of their own campanies to go to class at the appropri- a+.e t9.mea, to do their studiea well and to do good political and ideological work in the course of training. The battalion makes unified stipulatione - f'or the times which should be uaed for training, taking the company as the basic orge.nizationel unit for conerete implementation. Training competitions are slso carried out between companies. They also pay attention to ~oining orga,nically separate training and ~oint training. That is, after a stretch af separate specialized training they let the four kinds of personnel return to their own tanka ar~d do a stretch of 3oint specialized training. They then separate the training again in a repeated cycle. This allows the company cadres to gresp promptly the specialized technical conditions of the soldiers i.n their own companies end facilitates the personnel of each tank in prac- ticing cooperative maneuvers. Advantages of Reforming the Educational System _ Although the No 1 tank battalion has not trial implemented the multigrade instructional system organized in a unifiEd way by the battalion for a very long period of time, its advantages have already begun to become evident. 4 FOR O~FICIAZ USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400450007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY "With the new educational system, rookie and veteran personnel both have a kee:n i.nterest in study." This is the general opinion of the soldiers. Rookie and ~eteran personnel ha.ve separate drills and,lectures ~n keeping with their cliff'erent natures and there is both promotion and demotion. The veteran personnel do not study "the same old stuff," so they take an intense interest ~n study. The rooki.e personnel strive to be promoted to the higher grade ~and - put out a bit more effort to study and drill. The enthusiasm of the ba.ttal- ion's soldiers for training has been throroughly aroused. - "With the new educational system we no longer worry about the instructor problem." ~his is the impression of the company cadres. The No 3 company is a prominent example. During the first half of last year, the commander - entered a training unit and the vice-commander was not qualified. There were no cadres to haiidle the two main specialties of gunnery and driving. The company ran around in circles in haste and the best it could do ~Tas to pick out four soldiers to act as instructors. This affected the quality of the training. At the begi'hning of training this year, one technical cadre of the No 3 company was in the hospital due to illness, two cadres were transferred and there was no leader for one platoon. Yet because tre battalion organized _ S.nstrcction in a unified manner, the training of the No 3 company not only was as bustling with activity as before, its quality was better than in past years. "With the new educational system the utilization of vehicles, training grounds and equipment has been raised." When the company was the unit of instruction, vehicles and equipment were both guaranteed by the company. A large number of vehicles were utilized and equipment was in short supply. With the battalion as the unit of instruction and classes divided into higher and lower, the battalion has alternated basic specialized and general topics and topics involving basic theory and practical operations. Vehicl.es are transferred and equipment is guaranteed in a unified way by the battalion, overcoming in an effective way the above maladies, cutting down on the phenomena of idle v~:hi.cl.es, ~~ontending for vehicles and waiting for vehicles and increasing the train~ng t;ime of personnel in actual operations. ~ AS'ter more than two months the quality of training has improved markedly. _ Goo~i results have been obtained in those classes which have already been held. i'or example, the overall evaluation of the theory test for the specialized A ~ommunications graup was excellent while on basic drill No 1 the B~oup, with eight participants, had seven reted excellent and one rated gocd, with 1UU per�cent passing. The overall daytime evaluation was excellent f'or L-F~e ;3 participants in the A and B groups of drivers in basic driving, with :100 percent passing. Basic drill No 3 was rated overall excellent ['or groups A and B of the firat gunners. In practicing initiating and terrni- nrating the battle with anti~.ircr~ft machine guns, 13 ou~ of 14 second gunners were excellent and one did not pasa. 5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 I~OR Ui~FICIAI. US1. UNLY Re?nainin,r ~7�oblems ~ome new problems have appeared with the implementa+ion of the new educational system. The main one is that once the rookie and veteran soldiers were separated into different training classes it has not been easy to promote movements for the veterans to lead the rookies. In addition, once the battalion became t,he unit for instruction the cadres of the companies lacked a very deep understanding of ~he soldiers of their own company. This has brought witY: it some problems in company political and ideological work and in company administration. But they feel that these problems mmr~..y be solved b,y unc~vering new methods in the course of practice. Towards the end of Ma,rch the division had already held an on-site conference in this battalion and is promoting its experience throughout the division. 1_1723 CSO: 1+005/2U95 � 6 FOR OFFICIAL USE UNLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY , MILITARY AND PIJgLIC SECURITY ~ RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN COMMANDERS, SUBORDINATES DISGUSSED Beijing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chinese 25 May 79 p 3 [ Article by Pei Dingsan ~5 952 1353 0005 On Horse' and ' On Foot ~ [Text] During a rapid march to pursue and destroy the enemy during the War of Liberation, the troops marched day and night. The commander of one regiment was anxioue to annihilat~ the enemy and was continually blaming the troops for going too slow. Because he was on horsebaGk it was very difficult ~ for him to comprehend how much teaacioua willpowQr it took for the soldiers who were already completely exhausted to march one etep forward. In con- sequence some of the soldiers said, "Who doea not want to lay hold of the enemy as quickly as possible? Those who are on horse must know the difficulties of those on foot!" "Those on horse must get to know the difficulties of those on foot" is plain speech but there is truth in it which affcrdg food for thought. For example, com~aring those "on horse" to the leaders and those "on foot" to the maeses, this means thPt the leaders should attantively experience and observe the hardships and diffi~ulties. Whea they hand over tasks to the maesea or when they supervise and urge the masses to complete tasks, they muat take into accotmt the difficulties which the masaes encotmter and, with earnest solicitude~ handle nattere in a fair and reaso~able way. Numerous facta from:?~?e.war ya~(~a~~prove that when those "on horse" can know the difficultiea of those "on foot," the latter can follow the orders of those "on horse." At present we must concentrate the thoughts ~nd energies o� the broad masaes on socialist modernization and our "horaeback" lesders must likewtee "know the difficultiee of those on ~oot." Bureaucratic attitudes such as being unco*~cerned with the vital interests of the masses, not taking the sufferinos of the massea to heart and being insensitive to the practical difficulties of the maesea must all be reaolutely opposed and rectified. If not, the maesea wil~ treat you ae badly as you treat them, and it will be impor~eible to genuinely get eve ryone to concentrate their thoughta and energiea on modernization. There is another aide to the matter, however. Although that regimental commander grumbled about the soldiere, he also had his difficulties. 7 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-04850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL US~ ONLY If they did not pursue and attack the enemy rapidly, they would not strike them and migiit even affect the completion of the entire battle plan. From this angle, that commander was also correct in saying, "Those who are on foot must know the difficulties of those on horse!" So if we are to con- sider the problem from all aragles, we must advocate "those on foot knowing the difficulties of those on horse" at the same time that we should stress "those on horse knowing the difficulties of tk~ose on foot." After the disaster of Lin B iao and the "gang of four," there are some genuine practi- cal difficulties at present among the masses. When the masses present their own difficulties and demand that they be solved, this is understandable, and they s hould be satisfied to the fulleat extent possible. However, those "on horse" have difficulties ~ust in the same way that those "on foot" have _ theirs. The fact that there are problems which should be solved is not equivalent to having the wherewithal to solve them. We cannot simply look at our own difficultiea and present demands to our hearts' content by ~ust lookin g out for ourselves. We muat also consider the difficulties of the state and show underetanding and aympathy for straits of th~ leadership in not having the capability to fulfill all wishes. ~ Actually, both thcse "on horse" and those "on foot" are good. Their overall aims are the same and it is not difficult to unite them. At present the fundamental interests of the people of the entire nation lie 3n carrying out the four socialist modernizations. Thia is the big picture for the entire nation and it is our common overall goal. In order to realize this goal, both those "on horse" and those "on foot" must focus their thinking and power on the four modernizations. Those problems of livelihood for the masses which have accumulated over a long period ~f time must be grasped and resolved in order to facilitate ~whipping up the enthusiasm of the masses. At the same time we must look at the limitations of ob3ective conditions. We cannot aolve everything in a short period of time nor can we act with undue haste lest we block the four modernizations. At present, although the course of eventa hae already made a turn for the better, it is only an initial turn aa~ is far from a total turn. Much remains to be tidied up and to be built and we must atill rely on leading cadres and the broad masses to exert tremandous common efforts. As for thoae matters which we do not have conditione to reaolve for the titne being, we must still promote a spirit of arduoue atruggle and vanquiah th~ difficulties together. Only if we fix all m~r hearta and eyes on the ~reat goal of the four moderni- zations, ~oin present and long-run interests (that ie, taking present interests into account while s~bmitting to long-r~ interests) and ~oin partial intereats and thoge of the whole (that is, taking the�interests of the part into account while sabmitting t4 those of the whole), then ~he contradiction between those "on horse" and those "on foot" can entirely be unified. Tn order to better unify those "on horse" and those "on foot," both leaders and the massea should ado~t a positive attitude, increase their sense of responsibility and do their work with initiative. Leading cadres rnust have a mass concept, that i.s they must be concerned about the masses and think of 8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY them in every regard. They must also report difficulties accurately to the masses and publicize the Party's policies among them. In addition they must discuss things with the masses and concentrate their wisdom. The masses must have the thinking of protagonists and consider problems from the point of view of the overall situation. They must not only show understanding and sympathy for the difficulties of the leaders but also propose. ideas and think of ways of dealing with them on behalf of the leadership so that they may work together to overcome th~~e difficulties. If only those "on horse" and those "on foot" work with one mind and one~hear�t and forge a burst of energy, no difficulty can hinder the forward pace of our socialist moderni- _ zation. 11723 CSO: 4005/?.095 9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 NUR OFFICIAI. USI? ONI.Y MILITARY AND PUBLIC SECURITY AGITATION, PROPAGANDA HELP MAINTAIN FIGHTING SPIRIT Bei~ing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chineae 27 May 79 p 1 [Article by Zhao Gengqun [6392 2577 5028] of the political work teaching and research office of the political academy: "Whare Does the Fine Fighting Spirit Come From?"] [Text] As far as the whole conduct of a war�is concerned, proper orders, elogans and written addresaes to the troops are of the same important aignificance as first-rate heavy guns or fir~t-rate fast tanks. ~ --Stalin After the victorious conclusion of the s~lf-defense counterattack against Vietnam, we went to Yunnan and conducted a study among the frontier guards. We were particu- larly impressed by the fact that in thie battle the work of propaganda and agitation was well done, with clear-cut aime, strong militancy and broad mass support. The simple but effective fighting slogane and propaganda and agitation of every descrip- tion helped the army units to maintain their fine fighting spirit all along. We have roughly suumiarized the contents'and featurea of the wartime propaganda and agitation in a few pointa as a tentative outline for teaching. 1. Grasping well the education of "looking upon the enemy in.three ways," and arousing the troops' fightiag apirit. The comradea nf army unita taking part in the war said that thia is the foundation of propaganda and agitation. When.thia foundation is laid, the fighting epirit will be ignited easily like dried firewood. Before the battle etarted, all unite carried out education in looking upon the Vietnamese aggres- sors with hatred, looking down upon them, and ehowing comtempt for them. The troops were org,anized to read material on the crimes of the Vietnameae authorities in throwing in their lot wi~th the Soviet revieioniats, in carrying out aggression against Cambodia. and in purauing regional hegemonism. The comrades of local, foreign affairs departments: were asked to explain to the troops the origin and development of fighting in the border areas between China and Vietnam. Those overseas Chinese who had been driven back to this country were aeked to expoae the crimes of the Vietnamese author- _ ities in opposing and boycotting Chinese. The troops were taken to the sites where the Vietnamese army of aggression murdered our frontier guards and.people, and meetings were held to denounce the enemy. These live facts showed the cadres and fighters clearly the reactionary features of the Vietnamese authorities. Shi Yuannan [0670 2266 0589], a fighter in a certain regiment, said: "When I was born, my father was helping Vietnam with reconstruction. To remember the friendship between lA FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102109: CIA-RDP82-00850R400404050047-5 NoR oNM~ic~in~. ~~~i�: oN~.v the peoples of China and Vietnam, my :nother gave me the nawe of 'Yuannan' meaning 'Help Vietnam.' But now the Vietnames~: authorities have broken faith with us and are v�ing guns to kill Chinese people wh,~ have selflessly helped them. We must give these gangsters a heavy blow!" - 2. Instilling heroic images in the minds of the fighters. The army units taking part in the war compiled and published "honor ro11s" of theix own heroic insiividuals and groups for circulation and study, and set the stiandards for the fighters to win honor in time of war. All the fighters had these heroic images in their hearts, and became determined to "learn from and emulate the heroes, to become a hero with honor," and "learn from the heroes, translate into action, and make new contributions in defense of the four modernizations." The 9th company party branch of a cerCain regiment called upon the whole company to imitate Huang Jiguang [7806 4949 0342] and Dong Cunrui [5516 1317 3843] in launching an attack, to imitate hero Wang Cheng [3769 2052] in holding fast to one's position, to imitate Qiu Shaoyun [6726 1421 0061] in carrying out orders a~id observing discipline, and to imitate Luo Guangxie [5012 0342 3610] in opening up a passageway. The "Luoyang heroic company" of a certain Red Army regiment was unable to advance while attacking Height 171. Political instructor Lan Titang [5695 7555 1016] at once called out: "Carry on the tradition of the 'Luoyang heroic company' and fight for ~the prestige of the 'Luoyang heroic company'!" All the comrades of the company echoed loudly: "We are the steel-sworded Sth company and we are determined to take Height 1711" Theq charged forward bravely and took the height very quickly. Then, fighCing in coordination with otlter fraternal companies, they took two more heights in succession, and won new honors for their "Luoyang heroic company." 3. Doing a good job of agitation in the light of specific tasks. A certain regiment was giver~ the task of taking Height 230 by secretly crossing the Red River. They raised the cry: "Let's pull out the nai~., make a breakthrough, and open the gate for the entire division!" The troops were inspired to plant the Red Flag on Height 230. After the initial success, the higher couoanand again gave them the order to advance toward Wei,jin and Gantang and, together with other fraternal units, to encircle and annihilate the enemy 345th division. The regimenC party comanittee also called upon them to "maintiain the atyle of continuous fighting, take Wei3in, cut right into Cantang, annihil.ate the 345th division, and win a big victory." Under the stimulation of this slogan, the comrades defied fatigue and fought continuously. During the advance they ~ncouraged one another: "Let's brace up, wipe out the 345th division; let's exert more effort, hiC hard the '315' enemy (the Vietnamese 316A division)." Thus their fighting spirit wae high. The comradea of units taking part in the battle. learned from practical experience that when pro~aganda and agitation work was inte- grated with the concrete fighting task, it exerted a force which was quickly trans- formed into fighting etrength. 4. Shouting war slogans at the right moment. .All the fighting units agreed that shouting slogans aC the critical moment changed the siCuation entirely. They paid great aCtention to every phase of the battle and conducted effective agitation at the proper time. When the 8th company of a certain regiment had taken Height 154 and built their defenses, the enemy carried out a surprise attack in the night and in- flicted some casualties on the company. They im~ediately called out: "Turn our grief into strength and resolutely avenge our comrades-in-arms!" When the enemy artillery bombardment destroyed our heavy guns, they called upon all comrades: "Wipe 11 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 E'OR OFFIC'IAL USE ONL}, out the enemy with our rifles and handgrenades, don't let the enemy advance a single step!" When the enemy con~entrated forces in a mass attack and the fighting became very fierce, they shouted slogans loudly: "Never give in, and vow to live or perish at our posts." "Live up to the trust of the fatherland and the people's expectations, and strike down the enemy even with a bayonet or a rock." Thus, six times they re- pulsed the counterattack of the enemy. When the supply of ammunition dwin~lled on ttie front, the 2d platoon of the 6th company sent over their own supply. More slogans resounded along the front: "Learn from comrades of the 2d platoon, give the enemy a hard blow, and swear to hold our positions." Prompt propaganda and agitation inspired the fighters to become more and more courageous tn fighting sa that they were able to hold the in position. 5. Raising appropriate slogans according to the nature of the work of each unit. During the fighting period, all army units were guided by the general idea of doing everything to win the war, and raised agitation slogans appropriate to the nature of the work in their units. The artillery units raised the slogan: "Whereever artillery is wanted, we will go to fight." They were not afraid of difficulty or danger, placed their guns at various points in complex terrain, carefully aimed at every tar- get, and made every shell fired explode in the midst of an enemy group. The motor , transport corps comrades raised the slogan: "Wherever our troops are fighting, we ~ will deliver them ammunition and supplies." They endured the hardship of an arduous journey, traveled day~ and night. Some drivers did not leave the driver's cab for days and nights. The medicai personnel raised the slogan: "Our heroic comrades win victories on the front; we will spare no effort to treat the wounded." They ex- pressed their love for their class brothers by giving them meticulous medical care - and surgery, worked hard day and night, and accomplished miracles in saving lives and _ tending the wounded. 6. The outstanding commanders are also exemplary agitators. Among the cadres of _ troops which took part in the fighting, we fould a common characteristic, that is, they were both courageous in leading an attack and ~ood at agitation, and they put agitation and command in perfect harmony. Commander Liu Jianrong [0491 1696 2837J of the 4th company of a certain regiment led an attack to take a certain height. In the fighting he commanded his company and did the work of agitation at the same time. When he was hit twice, in the leg and in the abdomen, comrades tried to give liim first aid. He told them: "Don't bother about Fne, charge forward quickly!" Then, enduring severe pain, he led his fightere in continuing the attack. When they reached a spot some 20 meters from the top of the hill, he was faCally wounded in the head. He was still pointing at the enemy with his finger and with his last breath urged his fighters to charge forward. Company commander Liu's words and gesture gave ttie fighters tremendous strength. They shouted the slogan, "Avenge our company com- _ mander," captured the hill quickly and wiped out the enemy. 7, Through a mass network of propaganda and agitation wi~h Communist Party members as its core, field agitation could become everybody's activity. In the attack on Height 148, communist Jiang Jinzhu [5592 6855 2691], a squad leader of the 2d company of a certain regiment, was seriously wounded in the head. He said hoarsely to his deputy: "We both are communists and must captu.re this hill to win glory for our party and to avenge our dead comrades. If I die, you must lead the squad to accomplish this task!" He endured severe pain in his wound, destroyed the enemy's last firing point with a handgrenade, and set an example for his comrades-in-arms 12 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 kOR OFFICIAL USE ONLti' with his own exemplary action. Another comrade was wounded in both legs. When he was carried down the hill on a stretcher, a reinrorcement unit was passing by. He called to his comrades-in-arms optimistically: "I have some difficulty with my legs and have to go down and take a rest now. I hope you will fight hard. I will return soon!" Z'he fighters were moved by his words and said tearfully: "Rest assured that _ we will certainly avenge you." Scenes like these were numerous in the battle. It may be said that everywhere the cadres encouraged the fighters, the fighters en- couraged the cadres, the infantry men commended the artillery men, the artillery men praised the infantry men, the office workers encouraged the ~troops, and the w~unded encouraged their comrades-in-arms. The situation was lively. 8. Not sticking to one pattern and using flexible methods. During our tour of study we came to realize that the troops on the front used flexible methods of propaganda and agitation. The brutality of the enemy, the people's support, the heroic deeds - of the fighters iii the battle, the victorious reports from the battleground, and the letters from families in the motherland were all good material for the work of propaganda and agitation. Fighter Zhang Yuancheng [1728 6678 2052] of the 2d mechan- ized company of a certa3.n regiment sprained his foot in field training, ~nd it became very swollen. The aged leader of a local production team saw him, opened his wound with a needle, and sucked the extravasated blood out bit by bit by mouth. When the mechanized unit arrived at the front, the aged team leader again tramped over hill and dale for scores of li and brought gifts to comfort Zhang Yuancheng and other fighters. The officers used this event to teach tihe fighters: "The people give us support to fight the enemy, we must win a victory for the people." The 8th company of a certain unit was holding fast to Height 250 during a battle when the company commander was wounded in the head. Deputy political i~structor Deng Gusnglu [6772 0342 4389] took the commander's service cap, which was smeared with blood, and wrote _ the following words: "The hole was made by a bullet fired by the enemy and the blood was shed by our co~ander. Comrades, we must avenge our commander!" This cap was passed from one fighter to another along the entire position. It aroused the fighters' concern for their commander and hatred against the enemy. They were filled with rage and repulsed the enemy time after time in fighting back. The entire company held the position firmly like a nail being driven into the ground. The field work of propaganda and agitation is the essential substance of political work in the time of war, and it ia a fine tradition of the political work of our army. From the counterattack against Vi~tnam in self-defense we have again gained some new experience and enriched its substance. Provided we can carefully learn Erom and apply this valuable e~cperience, we will carry out our political work to better serve the modernization of our army. 9039 CSO: 4005/2088 13 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/49: CIA-RDP82-40850R040400054007-5 FOR ONFICIAI. UtiH: ONI.Y MILITARY AND PUBLIC SECURITY SHENYANG ARMY HOSPITAL ADOPTS NEW CLINICAL TECHNOLOGY Beijing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chinese 27 May 79 p 1 [Article by correspondents Guo Jindong [6753 2516 2639] and Tang Wen~un [0781 2429 0193] and staff reporter Yang Xuequan [2799 1331 3123]: '�The Successful Use of New Clinical Technology"] [Text] How do army hospitals carry out modernization: by relying on foreign advanced equipment or by depending on available equipment and using both native and foreign methods? The Shenyang General Army Hospital has carried forward the fine tradition of plain living and hard struggle, refrained from relying on others for help, and c~rried on its work and achieved "modernization" at the same time. Under the guidance - of this concept, it introduced 35 items of new technology in the first quarter of this year, 9 of which reach the advanced level in our country, including the treatment of congenital heart disease by repairing the closing tube of the tricuspid valve, and the making of a portable capacity-discharge grid-controlled.x-ray machine. In particular,.it has tackled the following three problems: 1. Correct handling of the relationehip between importing and copying, and trying its best to copy whatever can be duplicated by relying on our socialist superiority and collective wiadom and diaplaying a spirit of broad cooperation. In the past, the members af the hospital's radiology department had tried to fill in the gaps in the technology of diagnosing and locating~pathological changes in aoft tissues and nonmetallic foreign bodies. After aeeing pictures of a patented molybdenum-target x-ray machine in foreign medical ~ournals, they worked very hard Co design and build their own soft x-ray machine, which won a special prize a.t the National Science Sympoeium. Later, they visited a local hospital and saw an imported sample x-ray machine which was more advanced in performance and could take pictures in any position _ using a common power source in hospital wards. With the assistance of fraternal iinits, they again worked hard for 7 months, and in January this year they succeeded in turning out a replica of this maci~ine as China's first portable-discharge grid- controlled X-ray machine of the advanced level of the 1970's. The machine has been tested and used in clinical practice and found to perform well with satisfactory results. 2. Trying by all means to save foreign exchange for the state by doing our own re- pairs of imported equipment and making the necessary spare parts without waiting for and relying on imports. Last July the hospital's number one internal medicine 14 FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY department imported a fiber endoscope, which was laid aside due to lack of a con- ducting wire for a gastr~scope for high-frequency electric burning. Some comrades trtended to wait for the importation of spare parts before using the instrument in clinical practice. Later, they all realized that it would cost the state's foreign exchange and take some time to import the needed conducting wire, so they decided - to make one themselves. With the help of the hospital maintenance team, they suc- cessfully made a replacement part and promptly used the e~doscope in clinical prac- tice. In the first quarter of this year, by using this instrument in nine cases they successfully carried out electric excision of gastric and colonic polyposis. 3. Setting high aims and lofty goals to catch up with and surpass the advanced level when we have imported equipment and technology, as well as striving to create condi- tions for catching up with and surpassing the advanced level when we do not have imported equipment and technology. The hispital's number one sur~ical departm~nt la~t year performed 147 operations involving direct observation inside the heart in ' external circulation, of which 82 casea were Fallot's tetrad disease, with a success- ful operation rate of 97.5 percent, thus reaching an international advanced level. To develop in depth and breadth the surgical treatment of cardiac angiopathy, members ~ of the department actively created the necessary conditions and took their own raad of development. In the early period when they used valve tubes in the surgical treatment of cardiac angiopathy, they encountered many difficulties. However, they did not ask for assistanca from the state and did not wait, but took the initiative to look for means to overcome the difficulties. To make their own valve-frame, they approached a local factory to get some leftover bits and pieces of titanium alloy steel, and ttcey did their own processing by ha~ering them little by little. They had no biovalve, so every day they went to a slaughterhouse to pick out suitable valves from hundreds, sometimes even nearly a thoueand, pig hearts for processing, and then very carefully sewed them stitch by stitch onto the valve-frame. In January this year, for the first time in our country, they suceessfully performed an operation to repair the closing tube of the tricuspid valve in human bodies. 9039 CSO: 4005/2088 I 15 i ' FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR UFRI('IAI. l1SM: ONI.Y ~ MILITARY AND PUBLIC SECURITY BEIJING UNIT CARRIES OUT COMBINED-ARMS TRAINING Bei3ing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chinese 27 May 79 p 1 ' [Article by Zhang Meirong [1728 2734 2837] and Huang Yusheng (7806 3768 3yj2]: "Bei~ing Unit Carriea Out Combined-Arms Training for Better Joint Command"] [Text] One of the Beijing PLA units has carried out combined-arms training at a preselected operations area to help its commanders at all levels become familiar with the various armed service branches and improve their ability for ~oint command. Before this combined exercise, the arary unit uaed collective training as a means to have all armed service branches learn from one another, to have the infantry learn tYOw to get into tanks and armored carriers, and so that the commanders at all levels could learn systematically about other armed service branches and the principles of combat. During the exercises at various levels, the infantry was reinforced as much as possible by armed service branches with tanks, artillery, signal corps, engineers and antichemical warfare corps, so that all armed service branches could get prac- - tical training. When the regiments carried out exerciaes, the higher echelon set up ~ a field situation based on the enemy's formation, equipment, firepower distribution and tactics to help comcnanders at all levels, in conditions close to actual fightin~, to atudy ways of using their troope, disposing of firepower and setting up command posta, to etudy ways of ad~usting the cooperation of varioua armed service branches at different times, and to become familiar with the organized command at their own levels. The soldiers learned the order of battle, changes in combat formations under different conditions, ways of using topographical and surface features, alternative covering fire. and the advantage of la+.:nching an assault after a barrage of artillery fire. They said that they learned a great~deal from this practical exercise and greatly improved their technological and tactical level. At present, in the light of the weakness of ita cadres in combat coordination, this army unit organized eight training groups of cadres from among its divisions, regi- ments, battalions, companies and staff officers, intensified study and training in the organization of command, and made the determination to achieve better results from the training of cadres this year. 9039 CSO: 4005/2088 16 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY MILITARY AND PUBLIC SECURITY STUDY OF NEW WEAPON TECHNOLOGY, COMBAT METHODS URGED Bei~ing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chinese 9 Apr 79 p 3 [Article by Bing Yan [0393 1484]: "It Is Necessary To Study Seriously New Combat - Methods"] [Text] As China's Arcny modernizes, the commanders of the army face an urgent question: to strive to study and research advanced combat methods. As a historical process, the rifle defeated the aword, and new advanced combat methods will ultimately replace out-of-date and backward combat methods. This is an ob~ective law of warfare development and must be the ob~ect of the consciousness and generals of any class who must conform to this law and not try to change it. In the~history of warf are, battle by mounted troops negated battle by chariots; ' line formations of musketeers and lancers negated mounted armored troops; skirmish formations under cover of artillery negated line formations; and after the appearance of the tank, armored units took the place of skirmish tactics on the battlefield, etc. These changes in combat methode and means prove the truth that "Soldiers do not have a constant situation and water does not have a constant form." (SUNZI BINGFA, XUSHIPIAN) The thinking of combat commanders must not get into a rut and take steps without regard to the circumstances. Some comrades ask, "Aren't our proletarian arnry's combat methods the most complete . and most advanced?" No. There are two thinga wrong with this. The first is to ascribe the "class" label to combat methods. This does not conform to Marxist materialism and can only block our f ield of vision and bind us hand and foot. The second ie uaing the advance nature of clasa rather than the advanced nature of combat methods which departs from seeking truth from facts and becomes one of the theoretical basea of parochial arrogance. Does combat method have a class nature? To anawer this question it is necessary first to analyze its ob~ective properties and clarify the fundamental factors which determine combat method. In proving that combat method has a class nature, many comrades cite Engels as proof: "The entire organization and combat methods of an army and the victory or defeat related to it dependa on material, i.e., economic, conditions; it depends on the human and weapon materials, that is, it depends on the quality and quantity of the inhabitants and on the technique." ['~Selected Works ot Marx and Engels," Vol III, p 210.] Well in "Anti-Duhring" and other essays on military affairs 17 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Engels expressed this same idea. Under the conditions prevailing at the time, Engels felt that the method of combat was determined by the two factors of inen and weapons. However, later, new warfare partice proved that this conclusion had to be corrected. For example, to explain the fact that changes in the soldiers in the army determined the changes in combat methods, Engels used the American War of Independence as an example. He pointed out that the reasons the combat method changed from line tactics to skirmish tactics *~as partly because the Americans had the rifle which was faster and more accurate than the musket, and partly because the insurrectionists lacked strict infantry training and it was diff icult for them to master the line tactic. The insurrectionists fought for their personal in- - terests and unlike the mercenaries who deserted in critical situations, did not need strict line formations to keep them in check. At the same time, the Americans were hunters and marksmanship is suited to skirmish tactics. Thus, Engels came to the conclusion that skirmish tactics were "a new combat technique produced by changes in the soldiers." ["Selected Works of Marx and Engels," Vol III, p 208] But based on this conclusion: it is difficult to explain why later on mercenaries who were fully trained to serve the ruling classes and were neither hunters nor insurrectionists all used ski~rmiah tactics. In fact, after Napaleon, all the armies in the world, including proletarian armies, used skirmish tactics. It is clear that changes in the soldiers were not the main reason why combat methods change. Here, the ultimate reason is the deadliness of the rifle. In the face of its shower of bullets, all dense combat formations must disperse, otherwise it would be impossible to achieve the aim of self-defense and to destroy the enemy. During the Franco-Prussion War, the armies on both sides used breech-loading rifles in the f irst engagement, but because the commanders followed the old ways and still used column formations, suited to the time of the rifled musket, a brief transitional step in the evolution from line formation to skirmish formation, the Prussians attempted to stop at this stage and make it the combat method suited to the new weapon. As a result, they suffered great losses. In less than 2 hours of battle, they lost over one-third of their guard army. From then on the.column formation, , like the line formation, was completely discarded. Therefore, the idea which Engels emphasized repeatedly that "once tec?~nological advances can be used and have been used for military purposes. they immediately become dominant and frequently go against the will of the commandera and give riae to changea and even revolutions in combat method." ["Selected Worka of Marx and Engels, Vol 3, p 211] But Lenin summed up Engels' idea more accurately and euccinctly: "Tactics are determined by an arnry's technological level." ["Selected Worka of Lenin, Vol l, p 669]. That is, the basic factor which determines combat method is the development of weapons ansi equipment which accompanies the increase in productive forces, and all other factors, including the influence of brilliant commandere and changes in the soldiers, simply provide the external conditions for changes in combat method so that sooner or later the different armiea of other countries will master the new combat methods. (This is a general law of combat method change including even the selection and applica- tion of tactical techniques in apecific battles, based, of course, on the flexible changes in the ob~ective conditions of weather, terrain and intelligence, and the two cannot ever be combined.) Since the fundamental factor which determines change in combat method is the - development of weapons technology and not man's subjective will or changes in the soldiers, we can say atraightforwardly that combat method itself has no class 18 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY character and even less can the class properties of an army be used as a norm to , measure whether or not combat methods are advanced. Armies made up of different . classes but at the same stage.of weapons development may use the same combat methods. Armies of all classes may learn from each other in combat methods. Of course we should acknowledge that whether or not combat methods are advanced is determined first of all by whether or not the weapons and equipment are advanced. At the same time, we also should acknowledge that at the�same stage of weap~ns de~elopment, those who discover new combat methods are not necessarily tl-.oae who have created the new weapons technology. Having advanced weapons and equipment is a precon- dition for having mastery of advanced combat methods but there is also the question of whether or not those with advanced equipment are good at f i~nding the combat methods most suited to the new weapons technology. There is also � question of smashing conservative thinking, getting rid of the force of habit, not rigidly adhering to outdated experience and an obsolete military science outloek, but upholding the practice of proceeding from reality, and seeking truth from facts so that one's thinking will constantly adapt to the ob~ective laws of the develapment of warfare. It ie worth mentioning that when we discuss the fact that weapons determine combat metho~ and that the technological level determines tactics, we are not answering the question of what determines victory and defeat in warfare. Therefore, acknowledging th ob~ective law that changes in combat method are determined by the development of weapons we definitely cannot equate the issue of what determines the outcome of a war with the doctrine th~t only weapons are important. If one studies the advanced combat methods of foreign countries, even less can one talk of any "bourgeois classification". Today we want to accelerate the modernization of national defenae, and not only must we vigorously develop new advanced weapons and equipment, we also must make an effort to study and master advanced combat methods. Our proletarian army of course has iCs own unique principles of tactics and strategy. But its "advancement" and "uniqueness" is only in the righteousness and popula~ity of the wars we fight, i.e., in the human-sea tactics of the people's war, it relies on the support of the masses and on flexible application. Al1 hegemonic armies are divorced from the people and have little eupport. They can copy thE tactical and strategic principlee of people's war from our military specialir~ts, but they cannot really learn to apply them. But on the other hand, we can study completely the tactical methoda of all the armies iit the world from an understanding of the guiding principles of warfare in general, and with modif ications use them to enrich and perfect the strategy and tactics of the people's war. In the past, under the influence of the "leftist" line promated by Lin Biao and the "gang of four," combat methAd and tactics were branded with a clase character and the incorrect styles ~ of parochial arrogance and the notion tht they were the only true revolutionaries were developed. Furthermore, the carrying on of our army's traditional combat method and experience was also cut off at will according to the political needs of periodic "line struggles." Even today some co~amanders do not dare to use "point formation" and "V formation" in troop training, saying that this is a tactical principle of Lin Biao, so it's better to return to the pre-Napoleonic era and use close-line formation to stop the hail of bullets from enemy machineguns. This sort of old fashioned idea is unsuited to the situation as we modernize our army. That the development of weapons technology determines the changes in combat methods, should be said to be a basic understanding of Marxist military affairs theory. No 19 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPR~VED F~R RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OF'FI('IAL USE UNLY matter whether we stu~3y modern warfare or draw on foreign experiences, cr even study battles from our own past, ai~d study the strategy and tactics summari.zed by Comrade Mao Zedong, it is always necessary to adopt this viewpoint. Otherwise, it is turr_ing things upside down and pursuing the trivial rather than the essential. A few years ago, when Lin Biao and the "gang of four" were pecldling their reaczionary willfullness, this point of view was overlooked by people and many comrades studying military affairs and researching warfare were satisfied just to memorize everything uncritically a:~d to copy down existing conclusions, and indiscriminately to accept intact the r..ombat means and methods of the past. They did not know that military ~ affairs specialists should not be copiers but should be creators; the study of military tlieory is not "archaeology" but it is a field which should open up paths to the development of truth. Are not many of our older comrades paying serious attention to helping out and setting a good example for young cadres? This is a commendable spirit. But helping out and setting a good example is not simply mechanically imitating the past, you cannot paint a modern day "ladle" according to the "bottle gourd" of the past, but must proceed from the new historical conditions and combine what is to be passed on and what is created. Therefore, we propose that the basic Marxist idea that the 1eve1 of technology determines the tactics and the weapons determine the combat method be restudied, with the aim of making our com- - rades able to ove~haul completely their thinking and understand how to explore new laws for direct~ng war according t~ the cognitive line of ma.terialism. In studytng and re5earching new combat methods in accordance with the objective law that the development of weapons technology determines changes in combat method, we must start from the beginning--that is, we must study new military science knowledge, - understand the capabilities, characteristics and uses of new weapons technologies, get a firm technological foundation and then tactical means can be used flexibly. A far-sighted military scientist also shauld note the world developmental trends in modernized weapons and equipment and see in them the direction new combat methods and means will take. Those commanders who neglect to study military science and simply copy the exiating combat methode of others are not smart commanders. Many combined unit commanders lack the ability to "combine," and an important reason for ~his is their severe lack of acientific and technical knowledge. Our commanders also should look at another side of the questiori--changes in combat means and method also influence the development of weapons and equipment. This not only appeara in the proper use af tactica which can fully employ the existing _ technology and equipment, but even make up for inadequacies in the techology. Moreover, as soon as new advanced combat means and methods appear and are used, it is necessary urgently to demand improvementa in obsolete weapons and equipment and point the way for new technological development. For example, under the con- ditions of modern warfare, a clear characteristic of combat method is the dispersed arrangement of manpower and the concentrated use and camouflaged movement of fire- power, which demands in terms of technique, an increase in the range and accuracy - of field axtillery and at the same time also presents newer and greater demands with regard to the combat performance of aircraft and varying range antiaircraft weapons, and an imprc~~ement in existing communications, reconnaissance and engineering technologies and machinery, pointing out a general direction for the _ improvement of our weapons and equipment, to increase our self-consciousness and reduce our recklessness. The negative attitude that existing equipment is adequate and that there is no point in studying new combat methods or that limits study of - 20 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAI, USF ONLY combat methods to those suited to existing equipment is the "myopia" of military science research. The dialectical method is such that backward technological level~? can lead to backwsrd tactical thinking and backward tactical thinking must limit and constrict technological deve.lopment. Studying and researching advanced combat methods also must promo;:e change in our organizational and command methods. Just as technology determines tactics, new combat methods d~mand new organizational and command methoc; suited to them. This point we can see clearly in the staff planning in present military command agencies. Tn ancient warfare weapons and equipment ~aere ~imple, combat methods were basically close co~nbat and organ~.zation and com~nand also were simple. By 1$09 when Napoleon - met the Austiran Arury at Wagram, his command post was only 3 or 4 kilometers from the frontlines and he could still issue verbal orders personally to his troops (his orders co~uld be sent directly to regimental commanders). Later on, with advances in firearms, ~n~reases in the kind a.: soldiers and the use of skirmish tactics, the battlefield expanded and Napoleon could no lor_ger issue verbal orders to command his troops, sc a new type af staff officer appeared, i.e., Napoleon's chief of staff, Field *~Iarsha3 Berth:Ler. And by the Franco-Prussian War, Berthier also created the gener~l staff, then all armies in the world imitated ~he Frencn Army - in the creatlon of the organizational command. Modern warfare is m~ch more complicated than in the time of the Franco-Prussian War and the use of new military - tech~niques on the battlefiel3 and the production of new combat methods makes it no longer a bssic premise to rely on increasing the staff personnel. What is urgently demanded is to develop command tools, improve command methods, reform command organization, bor�-ow from advanc~d experience abroad and gradually automate organization and co~and. 8226 ~ CSO: 4005/2097 21 . FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY MILITARY AND PUBLIC SECURITY ARTICLES EXTOL FLIGHT HEROES IN BORDER DEFENSE Heroic Air Defense Commander Beijing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chinese 9 Apr 79 p 2 [Article by Pan Zongde [3382 1350 1795]J [Text] "FO11ow me, charge!" This is the code of action of Li Zhonglin [2621 1813 2651], the commander of an air defense regiment on the Yunnan border and it is a ; true portrait of his revolutionary spirit and soldierly life. ~ On 17 February, Li Zhonglin's regiment was responsible for security p~trol duty j in the battle zone in con~unction with a protective counterattack and defensive i border battle by the armry. When Li Zhonglin laid out the order of battle at the ~ regimental party committee meeting, he bravely put himself in the first echelon and demanded that the higher authorities give him the most arduous mission. At 7:15, four green signal flares rose into the sky and immediately there was the ' ~ roar of engines on the airfield. "Follow me, charge!" Regimental Co~nander Li led the f irst echelon and flew ma~estically toward the battle zone, ever vigilantly ~ patrolling the skies aver the motherland's border. One time, in coordination with the surface units which were punishing the Vietnamese invaders, Che upper echelons ordered Regimental Commander Li's regiment to help spot where our artillery's.ahells were landing in the battle zone. "Follow me, charge!" Again, Regimental Commander Li took the lead aircraft in the first echelon, and in close coordination with his wingmen vigilantly and nimbly circled and spotted. Suddenl~, the radio in their aircraft malfunctioned in the microphone. He quick-wittedly waggled his wings to signal to his wingmen. Wingman number 3 understood immediat~ly and quickly moved ~o the front to continue spotting and successfully completed the mission. Patrol missions often set out and return before dawn and at twilight. At such times the fog is very dense and visibility is ~ow. Flying under such conditions is very difficult. So that everything would be perfectly safa, each time they had to fly under auch weather conditiona, Regimental Com~ander Li always shouted "Fo11ow me, chargel" and led everyone to battle through the difficulty. Early , one morning, Regimental Comtnander Li was in the first echelon returning from a patrol when unexpectedly the fog began to get thicker and they couldn't see the runways clearly. Relying on mastery gained through many years of training, shortly 22 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2407/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400450007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY before they reached the airfield, he alerted everyone to use their compass precisely and pay attention to getting a fix on the verCical ground markers on the field so as to determine their position. Under his precise example and careful directions the entire unit landed safely and the pilots all respected Regimental Commander Li for - being bold but cautious and commanding well. Mechanic Ensures Flight Safety Beijing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chinese 9 Apr 79 p 2 [Article by Jin Shi~un [7246 0013 6511] and Deng Xudong [6772 4872 2639] [Text] On the morning of 20 February, as the fighting eagles returned from patrol one by one, the ground crew of the 20 Squadron carefully carried out a post-flight inspection. The mechanic Liu Shahong [2692 3097 3163] nimbly finished inspecting aircraft number 73's intake and then inspected the ~et. At the time the jet was still over 63� C, so the acting master mechanic had little Liu inspect it again early the next morning. Liu Shahong thought that the f ighting eagles had to go into combat at any time and if when he inspected it the next morning he discovered some obstruction th~tcouldn't be eliminated promptly.it would keep the aircraft from going into battle. He decided that he definitely could not have a chance for combat bungled because he did not do his ~ob well and so insisted on completing his task. He made his way into the jet and got soaking wet from sweat in t:~e hot interior. Holding a light he conducted a careful inspection of the fuel ring and the flow regulator and discovered a carbon buildup about the size of a fingernail in the precombustion chamber. He determined that this was the damaged part and promptly reported this to the leader. Then along with the rest of the comradss in the crew he worked through the night until 5:20 changing the afterburner. Because they promptly got rid of this serious obetruction, they guaranteed the fighting prepared- ness of this young eagle. For this reason, the upper echelons awarded Liu Shahong, Merit Citation Class III. Patrol Aircraft Extra Alert Bei,jing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chinese 9 Apr 79 p 2 [Article by Cai Shanwu [5591 0810 2976] and Liu Changdong [0491 2490 2639]] [Text] In the air 10,000 meters above China's southern border, from time to time comes a deafening roar: It is a flight from the high-speed fighter group of the Yunnan Front Line Air Force on patrol. Aft~r the self-defense counterattack and defensive border war broke out, each day this group was on the spot for 19 hours. Although the drain on the comrades' strength was great, everyone maintained high fighting morale and continued to fight without fear of fatigue. Deputy Regimental Commander Xia Youcai [1115 0645 2088] and group cadres Hu Da'an [5170 6671 1344] and Tang Qizhong [0781 0120 1813] who flew missions with the group, fought bravely in the vanguard, vied for the diff icult tasks and set an example for everyone else. 23 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAI. USF UNLY One day they were on orders to patrol on China's side of the China-Vietnam border. Their flight suits were soaked with sweat but no one complained. At 13,000 meters Deputy Group Commander Wu Chunfa [0702 2504 4099] and pilot Chen Xiaodong [71.15 2556 2639] suddenly discovered something ~uspicious. Wu Chunfa immediately alerted Chen Xiaodong to keep an eye out. They k~pt careful watch, ready to fight at any time, until the suspected target disappeared and they victoriously returned. At the same time that they were frequently going into combat, this group also took on training missions with other units. In leading they came up with an idea and sent experienced pilots to four airfields to coordinate training and study tactical techniques for destroying enemy aircraft. Through this training the air combat level of this and the other units was raised a great deal. In 20-odd days' time they completed all combat missions assigned by the upper echelons and received the praise of the leadership and comrades of the Yunnan Front Line Air Force units. Cargo Plane Crew Alert Beijing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chinese 9 Apr 79 p 2 [Text] Female pilot Wang Shuran's [3769 3219 5333] air crew of a regiment of the air force's air arm was cited for meritorious service 3rd class in carrying out an urgent airlift mission in the self-defense counterattack and border defense. During the 9 days that they were executing the mission, they flew over 6 hours each day and the longest they were on the gr.ound was 20 hours. Sometimes before a mission was completed, and the aircraft was still in the air, orders for another were received over the radio. Sometimes, just as a mission was completed and the air crew comrades had gone to bed to zest they were immediately recalled for a new mission. However complex and difficult the mission, however short the time, how- Pver difficult the conditions, they were always filled with pride and enthusiasm, Eearlessly, they thought single-mindedly of the needs of the'front and did everything to insure victory in combat. One time, they had loaded their cargo at an airfield and were ~uet ready to take off when auddenly they discovered that the braking parachur~ a fighter had uaed when landing had not yet been retrieved and at the same time a rear fighter flight was ready to take off for combat. If they took off as usual on time, the braking chute might get wound around the propellor blades but if the plane did not take off promptly it would have an effect on the rear fighter flight taking off. It was a critical situation and there could not be any delay. The air crew comrades bravely, reaourcefully and in close coordination took off along the side of the runway in between the fighter takeoffs. They coped with this complex situation successfully and their cargo got to its destination on time. ~ The good cooperative spirit and strong battle style of Wang Shufeng's air crew is inseparable from their highly developed sense of "liangzhang yiyuan" [0357 7022 0001 0765J. Air crew leader Wang Shufeng, party group leader Feng Gai3in 7458 2395 0603] and safetyman Yang Qinglong [2799 7230 7893], were true to the great trust of the party organization and the confidence of their comrades. They conscientiously did their duty, made atrict demands on themselves and served as a model in everything they did. Thus they spurred on all personnel in the air crew to stand fast at their posts, help each other, not fear diff icultiea, unite and fight, and relying on their callective wisdom and thua strengthen completely their mission in an outstanding way. 24 8226 CSO: 4005/2097 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY MILITARY AND PUBLIC SECURITY SAGA OF YOUNG SOLDIER'S SACRIFICE FOR MOTHERLAND Beijing JIEEANGJUN BAO in Chinese 9 Apr 79 p 1 [Article by Liu Liangkai [0491 5328 0418], Wu Shunxiang [0702 7311 4382], Liu Bo [0491 3134] and Wang Jianguo [3769 1696 0948]: "Charges Ahead to Heroic Sacrifice for the Motherland and for the People; Cadre's Son Zhen Ping [3914 1627] A Fearless New Generation Hero; Zhen Wenlin [3914 2429 2651] Martyr's Father and Deputy Director of Political Section Says Zh.en Ping Lived up to the Fostering of the Party and Peo,ple and Died a Glorious Death"] [Text] At 1643 on 27 February, two white signal flarea rose over the peak of Kouma Mountain reporting that the gate to Liang Mountain was open. Zhen Wenlin, deputy director of a political section who was just then at the command post in the rear, received a message relayed from the frontlines: His son Zhen Ping h~d led the first charge of the First Platoon, Company Eight on Kouma Mountain and herocially sacri- ficed his life. Deputy Director Zhen thought for a moment then said calmly to the comrade beside him: A price must always be paid for revolution, and that's what his death was. , To commend Zhen Ping's meritorious deeds in battle, the league and party committees have petitioned the higher authorities to bestow on him the title of Combat Hero. During his lifetime, Comrade Zhen Ping's behavior was commendable. In 1974, after graduation from senior middle school at the age of 17, with the encouragement of and support of hie parenta he went to a rural area for labor training and in 1977 he was recruited into the arary from the hydroelectric power station where he was working. In the army he was modeat and prudent and atudied hard to get ahead. He was on good terms with soldiers from worker and peasant backgrounds. In all things he took the lead and served as a model. He was evaluated as a model member, a pacesetter who studied Lei Feng_and a training pacesetter. A year after 3oining the army he entered the party and was called a superior student. In March 1978 he was promoted to squad leader and this January he was made platoon leader. Zhen Ping was filled with righteous indignation over constant encroachments of Chinese border regions by the Vietnamese reactionary authorities. He wrote many statements of determination to the party branch requesting that he be allowed to participate in the battle to punish severely the Vietnamese invaders. In a letter he wrote to his elder brother he said: "I will charge ahead for the motherland and the people even if it is to my death!" He said to his father, "Please don't worry. I won't embarrass the party and the people. You will hear news of victory." 25 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY On 26 February, Company Eight took on the mission of the main attack on Kouma Mountain. At the branch committee meeting at the front, three infantry platoon leaders vied for the mission to be the assault platoon. Zhen Ping repeatedly requested the mission and finally was given the task of being the assault platoon. Zhen Ping was very much aware that his responsibility was a heavy one: Kouma Mountain is 800 meters high, the slopes are densely wooded and the terrain is irregular. It is the sort of poaition that is easy to defend but difficult to attack: It is very strategically located but with difficult access. It is the gateway to Liang Mountain. Whether or not Kouma Mountain could be taken on schedule would affect the general situation of the battle for Liang Mountain. That night, he called the squad leaders and squad cadres together and engaging in military democracy, they studied the various mPthods of attack and drew up a battle plan. On 27 February, under cover of our artillery, Company Eight launched an attack on Kouma Mountain which was held by the enemy. At 1535, Company Eight launched the final attack on the Kouma Mountain peak and Zhen Ping led the entire platoon throughout the attack right at the very front of the company. Each time they made a breakthrough he fired off a signal flare to report to the command post that the assault platoon had reached its position. Our aupport fire crept up toward the top of the mountain and Zhen Ping bravely attacked at a distance of only about 20 meters behind the point where our shells were landing. Sometimes he would crawl forward, other times he would bound, organizing the platoon's fire as they wiped out three enemy gun poaitions in succession, right up to the peak. Our cannons had barely stopped when Zhen Ping charged to a point only 25 meters from the enemy entrenchment on the mountain top. The enemy hiding in the gun emplacement had not expected that our infantry detachment could move this fast and without looking threw handgrenades. One by one the handgrenades flew smoking over the heads of the plafioon comrades. Zhen Ping shouted: "Wipe out the enemy gun position!" The entire platoon opened fire together. Just as Zhen Ping had climbed over the entrenchment and raised the signal gun to fire a flare reporting victory a surviving enemy soldier hidden in the bunker fired a shot and Zhen Ping fell. Wlth a cry of "Avenge platoon leader Zl~en!" the comrades of Company Eight thoroughly destroyed the surviving enemy soldiers and took firm control of the main peak of Kouma Mountain. At this time our infantry, artillery and armored units were - struggling up along the winding trail of the lower part of Kouma Mountain. On 28 February, Deputy Director Zhen came from the command post to Youyiguan to bid farewell to the son who had lost his life for the motherland. Beside his son's body he said resolutely, "You fought for the motherland and the people, you have lived up to the fostering of the party and the people. Your death is a glorious one." Deputy Director Zhen requested that his son's body be buried on a hill beside Youyiguan where the border of the motherland could be seen, together with the other martyra who had sacrificed for the motherland. He took the uniform which had the hole of the enemy bullet and his son's bloodstains to give to his sma.ll grandson. 8226 CSO: 4005/2097 26 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY MILITARY AND PUBLIC SECiTRITY YOUTH EXHORTED TO BE MODEL DEFENDERS DF I~THERLAND Bei~ing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chinese 9 Apr 79 p 1 [Article by Wu Zhang [0702 1757]: "Two Generations of Heroes"] [TExt] In the def ensive counterattack, an army cadre went to the China-Vietnam border where he ran into his son who was a soldier in a border def ense unit. He spoke to his son in a sincere manner, "It is fitting that I should see you now.There is only one goal, and I hope that in battle you will not prove to be an unworthy son. The boy replied with determination, "I'm wocried about that too, and I've made"a plan for winning honor." The cadre then said, "The most important thing is ~ to stick to your plan on the battlefield. I,just hope that in ~the battle charge you will be courageous and tenacious." One of the leadership cadres from a forward unit learned of the son's brave sacrif ice and said proudly, "The kid did the right thing. He was not untrue to the training of the party." In this self-defense counterattack, such leadership cadres have encouraged their children to win honor for the motherland and there are a great many children of cadres who have bravely killed the enemy. Hearing these heart-wrenching stories ia like hearing a clear and majestic song: "Hark, the mother is calling the eon to fight in the East...." One cannot help recalling the lines written by Chen Yi exhorting sons and daughters: "The people reared you, repay them by winning honor. If the motherland ia in trouble, you should be in the vanguard." In this def ensive border war, the glorious tradition of our party and army has burst forth with daazling brilliance, too. What parent doea not love his child, and what parent does not look forward to his ciiild's future? Yet there are different ideas on the kind of future and how it can be achieved. In the view of a Communist Party member, children are not one's private property. Only by educating children to make a contribution to the people's enterprise do parents feel they have fulfilled their responsibility. They detest and re~ect seeking a way out for their children, proceeding from selfish motives, to spoil their children and even to use improper means to curry favor on their behalf. Ordinarily, they demand that their children study and work hard to do their little bit to help build socialism. Once it becomes necessary they generously send . their children to the front, with the same lofty sentiments and aspirations they had when they joined the revolution in their youth. They ~lrgP ~heir children courageously to kill the enemy and not hesitate to lay down their lives for their country. In particular they scorn the individualistic and mean behavior of those who hold back their children at the critical moment. 27 FOR OFF[CiAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FUR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ . Such parents are farsighted and know how to love and rear their sons and daughters. They def initely do not keep their sons and daughters under their wings but let then? go and do battle with the wind and rain. They understand that "A good sword comes from hardening; the fragrance..afplum flowers comes from the bitter cold." If they want their children to make something of themselves, they should not begrudge letting them go into the furnace of revolution and be smelted in the fierce flames. Of course, they hope that their children will become scientists, engineers and brilliant military commanders and make an even greater contribution to the four modernizations. They also know very well that relying on a comfortable home, lots of money and high class furnishings cannot pave the way for seizing the "jewel in the mathematical crown." Thus they encourage their sons and daughters to go to the difficult places.required for the four modernizations and to the battlefields to protect the four modernizations and be tempered in the flames. We extol the heroic older generation for being broadminded and farsighted; we also extol the heroic younger generation for its soaring aspirations and heroic vigor. Our promising younger generation understands that like father, like son does not necessarily mean that they are good people; one who relies on a"good daddy, good mama and good patron" in order to loaf about, can only turn into a good-for-nothing and be detrimental to the moetherland, the people and oneself. The early realization of the four modernizations brings ~oy to working under~hard conditions--making their home wherever they are and bravely shouldering heavy burdens. When it is necessary ~ to use their youth and ardor to protect the four modernizations, they step forward bravely and are honor-bound not to turn back. A long time ago Gork3. said "Because of their intense yearning for a happy life, one frequently sees among young people, those who do not treasure the things that others have won for them; one can also see some impetuous hawks who fancy too early that they have a comfortable roost. They are in too much of a hurry to enjoy the achievements of the present without a care for the fut~ire and they no longer strive to consolidate and strengthen this glorious thing which is beautiful but which atill faces difficult times." This message is doubly touching when read now. At a time when these cadres' sons and daughters must be models among the soldiers in the border defense, have not many young peopte, including cadrAR~ Q~r_s and daughters, gi,~ta;~ rid o~ the d~fect vi "too early fancying tney have a comfortable xoost"? 8226 CSO: 4005/2097 28 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY MILITARY AND PUBLIC SECURITY SOLDIER SUGGESTS IMPROVEMENTS IN TA(;TICS, EQUIPMENT Beijing JIEFANGJUN BAO in Chinese 9 Apr 79 p 3 [Article by Lo [7482] [given name unreadable]: "Suggestions on Improving Tactics, Equipment"] [Text] Comrade editor I am a soldier in the China-Vietnam border self-defense counterattack. All of our officers and men are brave and tenacious in battle and have won great victories against the Vietnamese aggressors. Through battle experience we have proposed a number of issues in strategy and tactics which should get some serious attention and should be improved in the future. On the basis of my own experience I would like to discuss several suggestions here. 1. When fighting in hilly and forested areas against an enemy who has taken defensive precautions and can operate in a dispersed fashion, we should not use , conventional daytime attack methods with large units. In battle the Vietnamese soldiers holding hilltops were frequently few in number, but our armies attacked with concentrated units of company or even batallion strength, which is like hitting a flea with a fist: It wastes manpower and increases casualties.. In a strategic _ campaign, "using an ox cleaver to kill a chicken" is undoubtedly correct, specifically each battle move ehould be applied flexibly on the baeis of such ob~ective factors as intelligence on the enemy, terrain and weather. The reason our army fought better and better in the last stage of the aelf-defense counterattack is that we understood the enemy and had flexible command and tactica. 2. The most threatening thing to an attack in mountainous areas is an established enemy firing point. It is difficult to wipe out an entire unit with patterned artillery fire; field artillery are numerically few and inconvenient to move; bazookas are not very effective against established firing points. Frequently, demolition teams use satchel charges, torpedoes and hand grenades to destroy them, but this greatly delays the speed of attack. If the explosive performance of bazookas were modified, it would greatly reduce casualties and speed up the attack. 3. The semiautomatic rifle's rate of fire is too slow and they are becoming less and less suited to modern warfare. In terms of accurate firing, within 400 meters there is hardly any difference from the submachine gun (in single shots). Due~to the extensive use of cannons, light weapons are mostly used between 200 and several 29 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ tens of ineters and at such times, the submachine gun is the most useful and its power can be fully employed. I propose that the semiautomatic rifle be re~Jaced as soon as possible by the submachine gun or small-caliber high-speed, fuJ.ly automatic rifle. 4. The present equipment for the individual soldier is of no advantage in combat and not just because it is heavy. The crisscrossing of equipment straps and belts is very inconvenient. Hand grenades, cartridge pouch, canteen, satchel, gas mask and submachine gun (or semiautomatic rifle), etc. brings to 6 or 7 the number of straps around the neck. When on the march in the moutains, there is also a back pack and every so of ten they all have to be read~usted, otherwise the straps get so tight you can't breathe. When we engage the enemy and 3ump forward under enemy fire, these equipment straps are.extremely inconvenient. Soldiers hope that this can be changed very soon. 5. Physically strong soldiers should be chosen to be frontline medics. Those wounded at the frontlines cannot be sent to the rear promptly mainly because the medics are physically weak, so the soldiera have to help each other to the rear areas and this creates a group of temporary noncombatants and weakens the unit's fighting strength. 6. The steel helmut is a necessary piece of equipment for the soldier and should be provided. Under enemy sniper f ire, hand grenades and artillery attacks, some - soldiers have suffered head in3uries and some have even died of head in3uries from stray bullets a thousand meters distant frum the enemy. If they had a steel helmut, many would have avoided such an in3ury. I believe that those who fought in this self-defense counterattack could recount more and better experiences. So that our arnry can rapidly modernize to suit the demands of modernized warfare, we urgently hope that the higher leadership and revelant departments will pay heed to the experience of this war and rapidly take effective steps so that our army's tactical thinking and weaponry will be greatly improved. 8226 CSO: 4005/2097 END 30 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/09: CIA-RDP82-00850R000400050007-5