Zhang Zhaozhong (military official)

For other uses, see Zhang Zhaozhong.
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Zhang.
Zhang Zhaozhong

Zhang Zhaozhong in Beijing in 2008
Native name 张召忠
Born 1952 (age 6364)
Yanshan County, Hebei, China
Allegiance  People's Republic of China
Service/branch  People's Liberation Army Navy
Years of service 1970 - present
Rank Rear Admiral
Commands held military theorist at the PLA National Defense University

Zhang Zhaozhong (Chinese: 张召忠; born 1952 in Hebei) is a Chinese military theorist at the PLA National Defense University.[1] He holds the rank of Rear Admiral in the People's Liberation Army Navy.

A frequent commentator on state-run television outlets, Zhang is known of his successful predictions about the Gulf War and wrong predictions during the CCTV live broadcast of the Iraq War. He is also known for some of his belligerent comments to hide the real military strength of China. The best-known instance was his dramatical denial of the existence of the Chinese stealth fighter J-20 by exaggerating the American technological advantages.

In contrast, he also sometimes expresses a low opinion of U.S. military capabilities, with his 2012 assertion that the U.S. would "run like a rabbit" if China went to war with Japan over the Diaoyu Islands being an example.[2] He also suggested that the PLAN might equip civilian fishing boats for suicide attacks against the United States Navy.[3]

Predictions

Zhaozhong is known for his CCTV commentaries where he has, among other things, said that smog is a good thing for China because it would obscure US laser weapon systems in the event of an attack [4] Zhang also publicly predicted at various points "...the U.S. military could not take Baghdad in 2003, hours before U.S. troops marched into Saddam Hussein’s palace; that Libyan rebels could not find Moammar Gadhafi in 2011 as the dictator was being dragged out of his hideout; that Chinese seaweed farmers’ nets in the Yellow Sea could deter U.S. nuclear submarines from approaching; that Chinese fishing vessels could destroy the U.S. Navy’s 10,000-ton Zumalt-class destroyer."[5]

References

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