2015 China Victory Day Parade
2015 China Victory Day Parade | |||||||
Logo of the 2015 China Victory Day Parade. | |||||||
Traditional Chinese | 紀念中國人民抗日戰爭暨世界反法西斯戰爭勝利70週年閱兵式 | ||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 纪念中国人民抗日战争暨世界反法西斯战争胜利70周年阅兵式 | ||||||
Literal meaning | Parade commemorating 70th anniversary of the victories of Anti-Japanese War of the Chinese people and the World Anti-Fascist War | ||||||
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The 2015 China Victory Day parade was a military parade held along Changan Avenue, Beijing, on September 3, 2015 to celebrate the 70th anniversary of Victory over Japan Day of the Second World War. The commemoration was the first high-profile military parade held to celebrate an occasion other than the National Day of the People's Republic of China. 12,000 troops of the People's Liberation Army participated in the parade, in addition to over 1,000 troops from 17 different countries. Xi Jinping inspected the troops. Li Keqiang was the master of ceremonies.
Background
The 70th Anniversary of V-day parade marked the first time that China held a military parade other than the National Day, and the first to celebrate the end of WWII.[1] Since the founding of the People's Republic in 1949, China held parades primarily on October 1, the country's national day. The most prominent renditions of the parade were held in 1959, 1984, 1999, and 2009, presided over respectively by then leaders Mao Zedong, Deng Xiaoping, Jiang Zemin, and Hu Jintao. The 70th anniversary parade was also the first major parade since Xi Jinping took power as the General Secretary of the Communist Party of China in November 2012. The prevailing theme was to be "peace and victory".[1] Xi Jinping had attended the 2015 Moscow Victory Day Parade in May as the guest-of-honour of Russian president Vladimir Putin, and Putin returned the favour at this parade.[2]
Preparations and restrictions
National leadership placed considerable importance on being able to put the best foot forward and do away with distractions. Bloomberg reported that the central government once again intervened in the stock market to ensure stability ahead of the anniversary; there were traffic curfews and closures of public facilities including seven parks and some hospitals.[3] Line 1, Beijing Subway, which passes underneath Changan Avenue, was shut down; 256 bus-lines in Beijing were placed under tight transport restrictions from September 2–4.[3][4] On the day of the parade, hospitals restricted most of their activities beyond emergencies, the stock markets were closed.[3][5][6] Areas in the city centre were placed under martial law, and 850,000 "citizen guards" were deployed to ensure security within the city.[1] The city authorities sent in trained macaques and falcons to make sure the skies over central Beijing were free of birds that would put the flypast at risk. The trained macaque monkeys climbed trees and dismantled birds nests in advance of the parade. Hot air balloons and hang gliders were equally barred from the city; those residing along Changan Avenue were forbidden from opening their windows during the lock-down period.[7] Domestic satellite televisions were restricted from playing entertainment programs between September 1–5. China Central Television ceased the broadcasting of all entertainment programming, only playing films and TV series about the Second World War. Xi Jinping decreed the creation of two new public holidays targeted at Japan, the first being September 3 - Victory over Japan Day, officially named The 70th anniversary of Chinese People’s Anti-Japanese War and the World Anti-Fascist War Victory Commemoration Day.[8] The second one was declared for December 13, marking the Japanese takeover of Nanjing, China's then capital under the Nationalists and the Nanking Massacre that followed, which resulted in many Chinese deaths by Japanese military personnel garrisoned in the city.[8] The CY Leung administration in Hong Kong argued for a holiday to facilitate participation in commemorative events, thus it tabled the "Special Holiday (3 September 2015) Ordinance" – designating the day as a one-off holiday – for debate in the Legislative Council of Hong Kong (LegCo) in July. The act passed despite strong resistance and more than 90 amendments from one legislator.[9]
To reduce air pollution and ensure blue skies for the parade, half of Beijing's cars were barred from the streets and nearly 10,000 industrial firms in Beijing and in areas near and far – Hebei, Tianjin, Shanxi, Inner Mongolia, Shandong and Henan – suspended or cut production starting on August 20 to cut down on emissions.[1][10] The factory shut-downs and road closures gave rise to rare instance of clean air, where PM2.5 measurements were below 50, and the lack of traffic jams, and these were welcomed by residents of the capital.[11] Observers noted that the umbrella, which became iconic in China-controlled Hong Kong during the protests in 2014, were nowhere to be seen despite the blazing heat although commonly used as a shield against the sun in China.[12]
Leaders in attendance
Chinese leaders
Xi Jinping, the General Secretary of the Communist Party of China, President of the People's Republic of China, and Chairman of the Central Military Commission, was the central figure of the day's events. Premier Li Keqiang was the master of ceremonies for the parade, breaking convention from its two previous renditions of the parade, which were both hosted by the Communist Party Secretary of Beijing (Jia Qinglin in 1999 and Liu Qi in 2009). General Song Puxuan, Commander of the Beijing Military Region, greeted Xi in front of Tiananmen at the start of the parade during the inspection segment, declaring the readiness of the troops for the marchpast.
Atop Tiananmen, Xi Jinping wore a Mao suit, as was customary for leaders inspecting troops at military parades; the first lady Peng Liyuan wore a red dress.[13] The remaining political figures wore business suits. Xi delivered the keynote address at the parade with a surprise announcement of a plan to cut 300,000 personnel from the Chinese military.[14] The other members of the Politburo Standing Committee, Zhang Dejiang, Yu Zhengsheng, Liu Yunshan, Wang Qishan, and Zhang Gaoli, watched the parade on top of Tiananmen Gate.
Former paramount leaders Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao; former Premiers Li Peng, Zhu Rongji and Wen Jiabao; and other former senior leaders Li Ruihuan, Wu Bangguo, Jia Qinglin, Li Lanqing, Song Ping, Zeng Qinghong, Wu Guanzheng, Li Changchun, Luo Gan, and He Guoqiang, also attended the parade at Tiananmen. This meant that all former members of the Standing Committee who were in good standing with the party and alive at the time of the parade attended the event; they sat in strict protocol sequence to the right of the members of the incumbent Politburo Standing Committee.[15]
Hong Kong Special Administration Region chief executive Leung Chun-ying also led a 300-person group at the parade, and Macau Chief Executive Fernando Chui also attended.[16]
International leaders
Current leaders and diplomats in attendance:
- Chairman Abdelkader Bensalah of Algeria
- Vice President Amado Boudou of Argentina
- President Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus
- Chairman of the Presidency Dragan Čović of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Minister of Defence Jaques Wagner of Brazil
- King Norodom Sihamoni of Cambodia
- First Vice President Miguel Díaz-Canel of Cuba
- President Miloš Zeman of Czech Republic
- President Joseph Kabila of Democratic Republic of Congo
- President Taur Matan Ruak of East Timor
- President Hailemariam Desalegn of Ethiopia
- Member of the Politburo Presidium Choe Ryong-hae of North Korea
- President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi of Egypt
- Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn of Ethiopia
- Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius of France
- President Nursultan Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan
- President Almazbek Atambayev of Kyrgyzstan
- President Choummaly Sayasone of Laos
- President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj of Mongolia
- President Thein Sein of Myanmar
- President Mamnoon Hussain of Pakistan
- Marshal of the Sejm (speaker) Małgorzata Kidawa-Błońska of Poland
- Governor General Michael Ogio of Papua New Guinea
- President Park Geun-hye of South Korea
- President Vladimir Putin of Russia
- President Tomislav Nikolić of Serbia
- Captain Regent Gianfranco Terenzi of San Marino
- President Jacob Zuma of South Africa
- President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan
- Deputy chair of Thai junta Prawit Wongsuwan of Thailand
- President Emomali Rahmon of Tajikistan
- President Taur Matan Ruak of East Timor
- President Islam Karimov of Uzbekistan
- Ambassador Max Baucus of United States of America
- Prime Minister Sato Kilman of Vanuatu
- President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela
- President Trương Tấn Sang of Vietnam
Leaders international organizations in attendance:
- Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon of United Nations
- Director-General Irina Bokova of UNESCO
- President Peter Maurer of ICRC
Former leaders in attendance:
- Former Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder of Germany
- Former Prime Minister Tony Blair of United Kingdom
- Former President Joseph Estrada of the Philippines
- Former Vice President and Premier Lien Chan of the Republic of China
Former Philippine President Joseph Estrada attended the parade, not as a representative of his country but as part of his duties as Mayor of Manila. Estrada cited the fact that Manila and Beijing were sister cities as his reason for attending the event.[17]
Criticisms
Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council, President Ma Ying-jeou and his Kuomintang objected to the event and what they see as the Communist Party usurping credit for leading the Chinese defence against Japan during World War II.[18][19] However, former Chairman of the Kuomintang Lien Chan also attended the parade, ostensibly in his personal capacity, sparking controversy at home.[18][19] Whilst Tsai Ing-wen, leader of the Taiwanese opposition, criticised Lian for failing to represent the views of the majority of Taiwanese, observers noted that Lien had considerable business interests on the mainland he sought to protect, likewise the Kuomintang also had interests on the mainland.[20][21][22] Hong Kong commentator Frank Ching added that Lien Chan's presence at the ceremony undermined the KMT, as China appeared to erase the role of the Nationalists in defending China.[23]
Other pundits said that the main object of the parade was to rewrite history and elevate the Communist Party's position in ending the war.[6][9][23]
Kyodo News Agency cited a US department of State spokesman that United States objected the President of Sudan Bashir to attend the parade in the news conference held on August 31, 2015. He stated that China should consider about the international society's worry as a UN security concil member with inviting or assisting someone who is wanted under the document of warrant signed by ICC.[24]
Parade groups
Some 12,000 troops marched along Changan Avenue up to Tiananmen for inspection by paramount leader Xi Jinping and the two living former leaders.[11] Each squad was led by at least one major general or lieutenant general in active service. 56 generals participated in total, including six lieutenant generals: Bai Jianjun, deputy commander of the Beijing Military Region, Tian Zhong, deputy commander of the PLA Navy, Chen Dong, deputy commander of the PLA Air Force, Wu Guohua, deputy commander of the Second Artillery Force, and Pan Changjie, deputy commander of the People's Armed Police. Zheng Qunliang, another deputy commander of the Air Force, commanded the fighter jet squad in air. This is the first time in PRC history that military parade battalions were led by officers ranked as high as lieutenant general.[25]
Veterans
Surviving soldiers from the Second World War joined the parade first time. They had fought under various commands, including the New Fourth Army, the National Revolutionary Army, and the Eighth Route Army, with most over 90 years old now. Some of the passed warriors' widows marched in place of their late husbands.[26] Besides Chinese soldiers, some surviving airmen of American Air Force who had fought alongside Chinese forces also joined the veterans column. This group rode in open-top buses at the head of the parade and was escorted by the People's Armed Police Motorcycle Escort Squadron.
Marchpast columns
- Colour party
The color guard consisted of 207 men and women from the Beijing Military Region Beijing Capital Garrison Honor Guard Battalion escorting the national military colours. This marked the first occasion that female service personnel formed part of the honor guard during a national parade, their first public presentation was during the May state visit of the President of Turkmenistan in Beijing, where for the first time they used the Type 56 ceremonial rifle.
- Representative companies from CPC units of the Second Sino-Japanese War
The Communist Party of China's hero squads consisted of detachments that could trace their lineage to units that participated in the war, these included the "Langya Mountain Five Hero Squad" (狼牙山五壮士), "Battle of Pingxingguan Hero Squad",[27] and the "Hundred Regiments Offensive Hero Squad", representative detachments from each Chinese military region participated in the parade led by soldiers carrying standards used by the predecessor units.
These represented the following CPC formations during the conflict:
- Eighth Route Army
- New Fourth Army
- Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army
- Southern China guerrilla organizations under CPC control
- People's Armed Police
A detachment of the Beijing Division represented the People's Armed Police, the unit chosen had previously been a PLA one and can trace its lineage, through the 114th Division of the 38th Army, to regiments that fought during the war.
- Foreign contingents
Groups from 17 countries were sent to take part in the military parade.[28] Marching in alphabetical order these were:
- Afghanistan
- Belarus - Honor Guard Battalion Minsk Garrison
- Cambodia
- Cuba
- Egypt
- Fiji
- Kazakhstan - Republican Guard
- Kyrgyzstan
- Laos
- Mexico - Cadets of the service academies of the Mexican Armed Forces
- Mongolia - Honor Guard Battalion of the Mongolian Armed Forces
- Pakistan
- Serbia - Serbian Army Guard
- Tajikistan
- Vanuatu
- Venezuela - Color Guard from the Military Academy of the Bolivarian Army
- Russia - 1st Honor Guard Company, 154th Preobrazhensky Independent Commandant's Regiment, Western Military District
Mobile column
- Type 99 A2 Main Battle Tank
A group of the latest model of China's Type 99 main battle tank. The A2 marks the last iteration of the Type 99 as its replacement is nearing finalisation.
- Amphibious squad
On parade where the infantry fighting vehicle (ZBD-05A) and fire support variants (ZTD-05) of the People's Liberation Army Marine Corps ZBD2000 vehicle, with an ability to plane when waterborne these are the fastest amphibious armoured fighting vehicles in the world.
- Mechanised infantry combat vehicle squad
ZBD-04A infantry fighting vehicle, troop carrying partner to the Type 99 MBT
- Air-mobile infantry fighting vehicle squad
The ZBD-03 IFV is a light airmobile infantry fighting vehicle (IFV) and the most mobile IFV of China's People's Liberation Army, was displayed for the first time in the parade.[29] Anti-tank missile and Light Assault Vehicles variants.[30] came afterward.
- Anti-tank guided missile squad
Self-propelled Red Arrow 10 anti-tank guided missile vehicles, they have an anti-helicopter capability, with fire and forget or man-in-the-loop operation.
- Self-propelled artillery squad
A group of PLZ-05A (1×155MM Howitzer) and PGZ-07 (2×35×228MM Oerlikon KDA guns) self-propelled guns, often nicknamed the "God of War" considering that they are the biggest guns in the Chinese military.[31][32]
- Wheeled amphibious fire support vehicle
- Wheeled fast light patrol/attack vehicle
- Wheeled anti-terrorism attack vehicle
- Self-propelled anti-aircraft gun squad
- The missile squad
DF-21D, the world's first Anti-Ship Ballistic Missile, was on display in the parade. They came immediately after the DF-15 and DF-16 missiles.[33]
The DF-41, reportedly China's newest ICBM, was not shown in the parade.
Flypast
- Fighter jet squad
The squad included 1 KJ-2000 and 8 J-10.[34] They were first displayed in 2009 China's National Day Parade.
China's newest early warning plane, the KJ-500, was displayed for the first time in this parade.[35]
The H-6K was debuted as well.[36]
5×Shenyang J-15, a carrier-based fighter jet, was also debuted in this parade.[37]
China's most advanced fighter jet, the J-20, was not shown in the parade.
- Helicopter Squad
8×WZ-10 (7) and 12×WZ-19 (0) helicopters formed the number "70" in the sky at 10:20 to mark the 70 years since the Victory over the Japanese.[38]
After the parade
The Parade began at 10:09 and ended at 11:40.[39] After the parade, Xi Jinping held a reception of the visiting international dignitaries.
China's Ministry of National Defense spokesman Yang Yujun said that the cuts to the size of the military would include personnel not trained for battle.
According to his opinion, China will emulate the command system of the United States by simplifying its management structure. China's one-star general Xu Guangyu also said that the China's People's Armed Police will be reformed similarly to the National Guard of the United States.
For historical reasons, China's military structure emphasizes the army and land forces. China plans to, like the United States, which keeps its army:navy:air force ratio at 4:3:3, focus more on other branches of the military. However, because China borders significantly more nations, the army ratio will not be as low as in the United States, with a new ratio of 2:1:1 planned. This means that of the 2 million force, there will be 1 million army personnel, 500,000 naval personnel and 500,000 air force personnel.[40]
References
- 1 2 3 4 Tom Phillips (21 August 2015). "'Old-school tub-thumping': 12,000 Chinese troops prepare for WW2 parade". The Guardian.
- ↑ "European Union leaders unlikely to attend China's World War Two parade, envoy says".
- 1 2 3 "Chinese Military Parade Sets Spin Machine into Overdrive". Bloomberg L.P. 1 September 2015.
- ↑ "北京256条公交线路9月2日至4日采取临时运营措施" (in Chinese). 人民网(北京).
- ↑ "北京阅兵当日协和等医院停门诊 急诊24小时开诊" (in Chinese). 京华时报(北京).
- 1 2 Russell Flannery. "Mainland, Hong Kong Stock Markets Shut For V-Day Holiday". Forbes.
- ↑ "Beijing pulls out all stops to ensure perfect V-Day parade". EJ Insight. 2 September 2015.
- 1 2 http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/08/20/the-secret-seaside-resort-where-china-s-leaders-plot-world-domination.html
- 1 2 "HK's Wartime past still matters: Alternate histories - Hong Kong - Politics, Policy, Government & Diplomacy". Harbour Times. 4 September 2015.
- ↑ "China moves to ensure clean air for military parade". Xinhua News Agency.
- 1 2 "China's military parade reveals what people really want". EJ Insight. 4 September 2015.
- ↑ "China's grand military parade: Some sidelights". EJ Insight. 4 September 2015.
- ↑ "习近平着中山装 彭丽媛着红裙亮相".
- ↑ "习近平宣布裁军30万" (in Chinese). 中国网(北京).
- ↑ "http://news.163.com/15/0903/09/B2J2PTKO000146BE.html" (in Chinese). Xinhua News Agency. External link in
|title=
(help) - ↑ "梁振英率300人代表团出席阅兵 名单包含反对派" (in Chinese). 观察者网(上海).
- ↑ Calleja, Niña (4 September 2015). "PH to China: Walk the talk, bridge gap". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
- 1 2 http://www.chinapost.com.tw/editorial/taiwan-issues/2015/09/05/445029/Lien-Chan.htm
- 1 2 "WWII parade: Beijing reaches out to KMT veterans". The Straits Times. 28 August 2015.
- ↑ 連戰參加中國閱兵 蔡英文:和台灣人民的觀感背道而馳,风传媒.
- ↑ 連戰閱兵是煙霧彈?名嘴爆:是為了國民黨在中國的黨營事業,三立新闻网.
- ↑ 天塌下來都要去!連戰不怕罵 赴陸閱兵為保家族企業?,三立新闻网.
- 1 2 "How China tried to rewrite history with military parade". EJ Insight. 8 September 2015.
- ↑ "美国国务院竟反对中国邀请苏丹总统出席抗战阅兵". 观察者.
- ↑ 六位受阅中将首亮相 三人由总参调任. Sina (in Chinese). 2015-09-03.
- ↑ "日籍八路军等40余名日本老兵抵京参加纪念活动" (in Chinese). 环球时报-环球网(北京).
- ↑ ""平型关大战突击连"英模部队方队亮相".
- ↑ "17个外军参阅部队走过北京天安门" (in Chinese). 中国新闻网(北京).
- ↑ "解放军机动性最强步战车首次亮相" (in Chinese). Xinhua News Agency.
- ↑ "9·3阅兵:轻型突击车方队接受检阅" (in Chinese). 中国新闻网(北京).
- ↑ "履带自行火炮方队受阅 为中国军队中最大火炮" (in Chinese). Xinhua News Agency.
- ↑ "履带自行火炮方队接受检阅" (in Chinese). 中国新闻网(北京).
- ↑ "常规导弹第一方队受阅 东风15乙和东16导弹亮相" (in Chinese). 中国青年网(北京).
- ↑ "领队机梯队飞过天安门 八道彩烟绚丽夺目" (in Chinese). Xinhua News Agency.
- ↑ "中国预警机家族新成员空警-500首次亮相" (in Chinese). 南方都市报(深圳).
- ↑ "国产新型轰炸机首次亮相胜利日大阅兵" (in Chinese). Xinhua News Agency.
- ↑ "中国自主研制歼15舰载机首秀阅兵场" (in Chinese). Xinhua News Agency.
- ↑ "20架参阅直升机空中组成"70"纪念数字" (in Chinese). 人民网(北京).
- ↑ "抗战胜利70周年大阅兵".
- ↑ "少将徐光裕谈裁军:武警或整编为国民警卫队" (in Chinese). 观察者网(上海).
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2015 China Victory Day Parade. |
- Farce to fuss over China's military parade
- Eight Highlights in China's V-Day Military Parade
- 2015 China's Victory Day Parade from CCTV
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