BEIJING :
CHINESE President Xi Jinping
has called for greater use of
technology and the deployment of a “smart system” for
border defence to meet “new
opportunitiesandchallenges”,
amidst Beijing’s unresolvedlandandmaritime
territorial disputes with
its neighbours.
The instructions were
made during a group
studysessiononTuesday
attended by the Communist
Party’s 24-member Politburo,
its top policymaking body.
Xi highlighted the need to
“strengthen technological
empowerment” in border
defence, “enhance the development of new methods and
conditions for border, maritime, and air defence, and
build a comprehensive and
smart management and control system,”HongKong-based
South China Morning Post
reported on Thursday.
This aligns with Xi’s repeated calls to improve the use of
advanced technology in the
armed forces to meet modernisation goals by 2027 and
achieve the goal of building a
world-class military by 2050.
Tuesday’s meeting lacked
details about what the
“smart” systems would
entail,thePostreportsaid.
However, an article
published last year in the
PLA Daily, the official
newspaper of thePeople’s
Liberation Army, said technological advancements for border defence included modernised reconnaissance, surveillance, and early warning
networks for efficient monitoring, as well as unmanned
weapons incorporating AI.
Xi called for efforts to build
a “strong, stable, and modern”
border defence, as well as air
and sea defence, to safeguard
the country’s national security and interests.
“As the world undergoes a
century of acceleratingchanges, the influencing factors have become increasingly complex. The constructionof border, maritime, and airdefence faces new opportunities and challenges,” Xi said.
China is facing tensions onmultiple fronts, including themilitary standoff with India ineasternLadakhsinceMay2020after Chinese troops aggressivelymoved closertotheLAC.
Since then, the two sideshave so far held 21 rounds of
Corps Commander-level talks to resolve the stand off.Thet wosidesso far agreedtodisengage from four points, namely theGalwan Valley, the PangongLake, Hot Springs, and JiananDaban (Gogra) in easternLadakh. India is pressing thePLA to disengage from theDepsang and Demchok areas,
maintaining thatthere cannotbe the restoration of normalcy in its relations with Chinaas long as the state of the borders remains abnormal.