Of course you can use any tactic you want. Just that the human wave tactic is the least intelligent, most wasteful, most cruel, and most demoralizing.
China may not use the human wave tactic today, but once China have a taste of it, it is difficult to de-institutionalize it, kid. The way you talk is typical callousness of someone who knows he has no relevant experience but does not care of those who suffered through a war.
No...The bulk of Chinese troops in North Viet Nam during the war engaged in construction, air defense, and POW interrogation.
The totality of what is combat experience involves more than what China did in the Vietnam War, son. Special Forces often do not engage in battle, especially when the mission is reconnaissance. But that experience is invaluable in the sense that the SF troopers must come very close to the enemy in order to gather vital combat intelligence for the main force. Were there any PLA special forces troopers active against the US/SVN alliance in Viet Nam below the 17th parallel ? POW interrogation is too niche of a specialty. Air defense is essentially reactive in nature. You are at the convenience of the enemy when he comes to you.
True combat experience requires the army to be proactive when necessary. It must be willing to reach beyond secured, not necessary safe, borders. Aggression is not enough but intelligent and focused aggression is the key. When a new technology is available, this army must be willing to experiment in battle if necessary, even if just for the later generation's benefits. Returning to the Vietnam War as an example, the US reached beyond its own hemisphere. Its army was aggressive in pursuing not just the enemy but also in new tactics and technology. Fast forward to Desert Storm, the US became -- to date -- the only military force in history to conduct an extra-hemispherical conquest of a continental power without relying on foreign resources to win. Foreign resources in this case mean the US did not need to 'live off the land' like past expeditionary armies.
The PLA does not have 1/10th of this level of expertise, experience, depth, and scope of warfare.
I have no doubt the PLA's leadership contains generals and admirals who amateurishly thinks like you do. After all, often money is equal to patriotism in rising through the ranks in the PLA. I hope there are more of their kind.
Conscription is not force, it is selective compulsion at convenience. It means the government have a legal reserve to use force if necessary to create an army. The availability of potential recruits have nothing to do with the policy. As for our registration system, it is not conscription but merely a record of potential recruits.
Wanted: China's next top guns - CNN.com
This is not about passing basic training but about being mentally strong enough to make the military a career
CHOICE.
The PLA's service contract is two-yrs. Do you have any idea how inadequate that is ?
Basic Training is at least 90-days, but let us be generous and say 60-days. Depending on specialty, additional basic technical training will take at least another 60-days, then advanced technical training at the unit can take as long as 6-months. That means after the first yr, the enlistee will develop the 'shortermer' mentality where he will perform only the bare minimum to get by. There will be no desire for personal development, no preparation for advanced studies like the USAF's Professional NCO education courses, no intellectual hunger for advanced technical understanding of the weapon system he is tasked to maintain, and the worst of all, possible contempt for the service and its mission as the shortermer get closer and closer to the end of his legal obligation.
Your PLA have the same institutional problems with short term conscription service as with any military in history with similar policies. With today's technology, maintenance of complex weapons systems falls upon the few dedicated souls in the service and their numbers will be rare. Under combat related stress, they will have few they can trust to delegate responsibilities to accomplish the mission. You think that just because China can build an aircraft carrier that mean China can field tough enough men and women to sustain that carrier in combat ? You think the sailor with six months to go on his contract is going to give any shit on how to improve launch/recovery time to match the Americans' experience ?
So by all means, believe Perfesser Dingding Chen of the University of Macau when he declared that combat experience is overrated. I hope the PLA take his opinion to heart and policies.