China’s
millions of only children—known as “little emperors” for how they are
doted upon by parents and grandparents—may turn out to be terrible
soldiers. As much as 70% of the Chinese military (paywall)
is made up of men and women who are the only children in their family,
according to a professor at the People’s Liberation Army National
Defense University—a figure that gives some military policymakers reason
to worry.
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“Soldiers from the one-child generations are wimps who have absolutely no fighting spirit,” warned the Study Times, an ideology-focused government publication.
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Defense experts have been debating whether China’s expanding military is much weaker than it looks. For instance, Chinese troops haven’t been in combat since 1979 and officers spend almost 40% of their time in “political training.”
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China’s
only children generation, born after 1979 when the country’s “one
child” policy went into effect, was once viewed as a boon to the
People’s Liberation Army. Higher levels of education and ease with
technology were supposed to make them “quick to understand modern warfare in a high-tech era.” In general, China’srecently relaxed population control policy was to create a generation of high-quality children with
more resources at their disposal. But studies and anecdotes about the
detrimental effects of raising Chinese children without siblings have
led many to worry that they are too pampered, pessimistic, and
risk-adverse to handle careers as entrepreneurs, cooperative coworkers, and especially soldiers.
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Quartz has previously pointed out some of the holes in this argument.
Other studies have shown that only Chinese children showed no
personality differences from their peers with siblings and that many use
classmates or other family members as surrogate siblings and playmates.
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But
whether or not there are meaningful differences between the fighting
spirit of only children and those with siblings, Chinese military
leaders seem to believe so. The PLA reportedly runs special training to toughen up ”spoiled”
soldiers. Dean Cheng, an analyst with the Heritage Foundation in
Washington, attributed China’s focus on psychological warfare to the
fact that many of its soldiers are only children. “He wrote in
July, “because of the one-child policy, young people are pampered and
may therefore be more psychologically brittle and less capable of
handling stress. Defensive psychological measures are therefore seen as
an essential means of limiting the impact of wartime pressures on them.”
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Still,
as US defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld famously said, “you go to war
with the army you have,” and China has big military ambitions. Last
year, it spent $131.7 billion (pdf)
on its defense forces, almost 40% of total spending in the Asia Pacific
region, according to estimates released by IHS Jane’s annual defense
review this week. At least for the time being, as China continues
expanding its military, it has little choice but to fill its military
ranks with more little emperors.
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