Edward C O’Dowd and John F Corbett, Jr, The 1979 Chinese Campaign in Vietnam: Lessons Learned. pp 353-378
http://www.isn.ethz.ch/isn/Digit ... ng=en&id=100621
Note:
(a) The "ch" is country code for Switzerland.
(b) The work of Edward C O’Dowd and John F Corbett, Jr was Chapter 10, in Laurie Burkitt, Andrew Scobell, and Larry M Wortzel (eds) The Lessons of History: The Chinese People’s Liberation Army at 75. US Army War College Strategic Studies Institute (SSI), July 2003.
http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/PUB52.pdf
(c) Quote from Chapter 10:
"Chinese artillery was ineffective. Chinese gunners did not understand how to measure distances and calculate firing data. As a result, the Chinese artillery could not provide effective indirect fire. The Chinese artillery was limited to large-scale barrage firings on prominent terrain features or inaccurate fire on smaller targets. The Chinese apparently did not have a 'call for fire' procedure. Therefore, the Chinese artillery was no more effective than the artillery of the Napoleonic era or the early American Civil War." pp 355-356
"During the Campaign, the students from the [Guangzhou Military Region] Infantry School[Guangzhou Junqu Bubing Xuexiao, which reported in 1979] discovered that the PLA soldiers, at least those from the 43rd Army, could not detect and clear mine fields." p 356
"According to the report of the Infantry School, an instructor, Niu Chengju, from the school found that a regiment was unable to perform its mission because its leaders had a poor understanding of topography and map reading." p 356
"The Vietnamese had unexpected help in their defense against the Chinese attacks. Less that a week into the campaign when the fighting was most fierce, Chinese units began to report shortages of food and water. * * * The Chinese logistics system, although its lines of support extended a mere four or five kilometers into Vietnam and less than 30 kilometers from its railhead at Pingxiang (VN: Bang Tuong), apparently failed. These incidents happened near Lang Son, but the PLA’s weak logistics created similar incidents in the other theaters of the war (e.g., Lao Cai, Cao Bang)." p 357
"The PLA’s logistics problems were, at first glance, a matter of numbers. The Chinese force of 30 divisions required 500 tons of supplies every day for each division (15,000 tons). To move the 15,000 tons of supplies, the force needed trucks. The largest Chinese trucks (Zil-151, Zil-157, Ca-30) carried 9,900 lbs. (4,500 kg.) or 4.95 tons. Therefore, the PLA invasion force needed 3,030 trucks to carry the supplies necessary to keep operating for 1 day. The Chinese divisions had trucks, but the trucks were the prime movers for artillery and other heavy equipment. They were not supply trucks * * * The PLA logistics troops had access to a few independent transportation regiments (702 transportation trucks each), commune trucks, packhorses, and coolies to make up the difference between the requirement and the transportation capacity of their units, essentially zero. But managing four modes of transportation had to be a nightmare. As a result, food, water, and ammunition frequently failed to get to the right place at the right time." p 360
"The quality of troops was judged to be very low, Chinese tactics were not effective, and the level of coordination was inadequate[, according to the 1997 assessment of China's Academy of Military Sciences 9AMS)]." p 362
"It is difficult to say if the PLA of the 1990s had better troops in its ranks than did the PLA of 1979. In 1979 the PLA was a route of social mobility for peasants to escape the poverty of the countryside or, at least, to improve their situation if they returned to their home commune after demobilization. * * * There were few economic alternatives for peasant men in the Maoist economy * * * The new economic policies of Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin changed the situation during the 1980s and 1990s. * * * In the China of Jiang Zemin, there was very little incentive to join the army." p 363
"Any effort to understand the lessons the PLA learned from the 1979 Campaign cannot avoid the feeling that the PLA is not being fully honest with itself. All the problems the various authors discuss were problems in areas that the PLA has attempted to reform in the last 2 decades. But, there were many other problems in the 1979 Campaign that the PLA has not discussed." p 370
"In 1979, the PLA did not have ranks and insignia. This simple fact led to confusion on the battlefield. It was not until 1988 that this problem was rectified with the reinstitution of ranks." pp 370-371
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