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Executive Summary
Although China continues to lag approximately two decades behind the world’s most sophisticated
air forces in terms of its ability to develop and produce fighter aircraft and other
complex aerospace systems, it has moved over time from absolute reliance on other countries
for military aviation technology to a position where a more diverse array of strategies can be
pursued. Steps taken in the late 1990s to reform China’s military aviation sector demonstrated
an understanding of the problems inherent in high-technology acquisition, and an effort to
move forward. However, a decade later it remains unclear how effective these reforms have
been. Where are the People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) and China’s military aviation
industry headed? What obstacles must be overcome for China to join the exclusive ranks of
those nations possessing sophisticated air forces and aviation industries capable of producing
world-class aircraft?
This study identifies potential aviation technology development and procurement strategies,
presents a general model of the options available to developing countries, and applies
that model to explain Chinese procurement and aviation technology acquisition efforts over
the last 60 years. The model articulates three main technology procurement avenues: purchase
(buy), indigenous development (build), and espionage (steal), and three subavenues: reverse
engineering (combining buy/steal and build), coproduction (combining buy and build), and
codevelopment (combining buy and build, with an emphasis on build). It examines the costs,
benefits, and tradeoffs inherent in each approach. Four variables influence decisions about the
mix of strategies: (1) a country’s overall level of economic development, in particular the state of
its technical/industrial base; (2) the technological capacity of a country’s military aviation sector;
(3) the willingness of foreign countries to sell advanced military aircraft, key components,
armaments, and related production technology; and (4) the country’s bargaining power vis-àvis
potential suppliers.
In applying the model, we divide the evolution of China’s military aviation industry
into five periods based on China’s changing access to foreign suppliers of military aircraft
and aviation technology. Soviet assistance (1950–1960) provided the foundation for China’s
military aviation industry, which cut its teeth coproducing Soviet fighter, bomber, and transport
aircraft. Given Western embargoes, Moscow offered the only viable path to advanced
aviation technology and provided assistance on favorable terms to support its communist
ally. The second period (1960–1977) is marked by the Sino-Soviet split, which eliminated
Chinese access to cutting-edge aviation hardware. China continued to produce and make
modest refinements to 1950s vintage Soviet aircraft designs, using reverse engineering to fill
in gaps where technical information was lacking. In the third period (1977–1989), China
gained some access to Western aviation components and technologies and sought to apply
them to a variant of the J–8 (a twin engine fighter based on a modified MiG–21 design) and
the JH–7 (a fighter-bomber with a British engine). The fourth period (1989–2004) is marked
by Western bans on arms sales to China in the wake of Tiananmen, Sino-Soviet rapprochement
(leading to sales of advanced Russian fighters and coproduction arrangements), and
a brief but important window of access to Israeli technologies. Covert access to advanced
Western fighters and espionage (in both traditional forms and via computer network operations)
also began to make more contributions.
In the fifth period (2004–present), China has enjoyed increased access to foreign commercial
aviation technologies and has benefited from a “spin-off, spin-on” dynamic in gaining
commercial access to dual-use technologies and applying them for military purposes. However,
China’s legitimate access to advanced military-specific technologies has been reduced as
Western sources of supply remained closed and Russia has become more reluctant to provide
advanced aviation technology due to China’s reverse engineering of the Su-27, fear of future
competition for export markets, and concerns about China’s long-term strategic direction.
China has used coproduction, selected purchases of advanced aircraft, reverse engineering,
and foreign design assistance to build a capable military aviation industry with a significant
indigenous design and production capacity. The Chinese military aviation industry can now
produce two fourth-generation fighters roughly equal to those in advanced air forces: the J–10
(indigenously developed with Israeli assistance) and the J–11B (based on coproduction and
reverse engineering of the Su-27). Both aircraft still rely on imported Russian turbofan engines.
Test flights of the new J–20 stealth fighter prototype demonstrate Chinese ambitions to
build fifth-generation fighters, but the extent to which the J–20 will match the performance of
state-of-the-art Russian and Western fighters is unclear. Significant technical hurdles in engine
design, avionics, and systems integration are likely to delay operational deployment of the J–20
until about 2020. This would be about 15 years after the F–22 entered U.S. Air Force service,
supporting an overall assessment that the Chinese military aviation industry remains 15–20
years behind.
Producing state-of-the-art fighters requires an aviation industry to master a range of highly
advanced, military-specific technologies. The historical development of China’s military aviation
industry reflects an ongoing tension between the desire for self-reliance in defense and
the need for access to advanced foreign technologies. China’s legitimate access to cutting-edge
Western military technologies will likely remain curtailed and Russian reluctance to supply
advanced military technologies will likely grow. These assumptions support two important conclusions.
First, the Chinese military aviation industry will have to rely primarily on indigenous
development of advanced “single-use” military aviation technologies in the future. The Chinese
government is pursuing a range of “indigenous innovation” and technology development programs,
but mastering advanced technologies becomes more difficult and expensive as a country
moves closer to the technology frontier. This leads to a second, related conclusion: China will
likely rely more heavily on espionage to acquire those critical military aviation technologies it
cannot acquire legitimately from foreign suppliers or develop on its own.
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