China’s People’s Liberation Army Watching and Learning from the U.S.-Iran Conflict

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China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has been watching and learning from the U.S.-Iran conflict. (Photo by Xinhua/Cheng Min)China is studying the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran as part of a long-standing pattern of learning from American conflicts to reshape its own military strategy. Just as the 1991 Gulf War exposed the power of high-tech networked warfare and triggered decades of People’s Liberation Army (PLA) modernization, the Iran war is now being analyzed for insights into AI-driven targeting, multi-domain operations, and real-time intelligence integration.China Military Bugle, a PLA-affiliated outlet, published five lessons from the war for domestic military audiences, an unusual public statement that serves simultaneously as a critique of the U.S., a warning against complacency within PLA ranks, and a signal to the rest of the world not to underestimate Chinese resolve.The first lesson, labeled ‘Deadliest threat: the enemy within,’ reflects the U.S. and Israeli ability to neutralize high-value targets early in the conflict through human intelligence. Taiwan defense analyst Cheng-Yu Wu, a policy analyst at Taiwan’s Institute for National Defense and Security Research, said the efficiency of the Mossad and CIA proved the depth of infiltration within the Iranian regime.According to Wu, this fact ‘definitely terrifies China’ because even with Chinese-exported surveillance equipment and techniques in place, the U.S. and Israel found a way to circumvent Iran’s monitoring systems. The lesson reinforces Beijing’s longstanding concern about internal security and the limits of technological surveillance.The second lesson, ‘Costliest miscalculation: blind faith in peace,’ addresses Iran’s failure to anticipate military action while negotiations were ongoing. Oman-mediated talks had given Tehran the impression that non-military options still existed, but the U.S. launched strikes regardless. Yun Sun, Director of the China Program at the Stimson Center, said the implied message to PLA forces is a hardline position on the U.S. and a criticism of what Chinese commentary calls the American ‘fake promise of peace.’ The PLA is using this lesson to indoctrinate its own armed forces about the need to remain on a war footing and not to trust U.S. diplomatic engagement.The third lesson, ‘Coldest reality: the logic of superior firepower,’ is the operational core. In the opening 48 hours of Operation Epic Fury, the U.S. deployed B-2 stealth bombers against hardened underground facilities, fired Tomahawk cruise missiles from destroyers in the Arabian Sea, and used a new autonomous drone called LUCAS in combat for the first time. LUCAS is a $35,000 one-way suicide drone reverse-engineered from Iran’s own Shahed design.The introduction of low-cost, mass-producible attack drones alongside precision missiles is not a tactical footnote for PLA planners. China reached the same doctrinal conclusion years ago and is now watching the U.S. arrive at the same logic and act on it at scale.The fourth lesson, ‘Cruelest paradox: the illusion of victory,’ addresses the internal political problem authoritarian regimes face in modern warfare. Ruling elites in such systems need to maintain a narrative of inevitable victory to sustain legitimacy. Chinese commentary suggests the PLA may be starting to recognize that propaganda cannot compensate for real military disadvantages against a power like the United States. The fifth lesson, ‘Ultimate reliance: self-reliance,’ draws the conclusion that technological independence is non-negotiable. Iran’s dependence on external support, including Chinese-supplied systems, left it exposed in ways Beijing intends to avoid.Iran’s air defense network incorporates Chinese and Russian components, and that network has been systematically dismantled in the conflict. The failure modes are of direct interest to PLA engineers: which radar nodes were hit first, how American electronic warfare degraded the command network, and how quickly suppression sequencing worked. Iran is functioning as a live stress test of equipment and doctrine that China shares.China spent decades helping Iran design its drone fleet and supplied critical guidance and engine system components while, according to unofficial sources, combining PLA space surveillance and navigation satellite architecture to guide Iran’s ballistic missile and drone strikes. The battlefield performance of those systems under American attack is now feeding directly into Chinese defense engineering.China’s broader military philosophy, known as ‘Systems Destruction Warfare Strategy,’ does not aim to destroy individual American or Israeli weapons platforms, but to disrupt the network connecting U.S. forces. The Iran conflict is reinforcing this direction. The key focus is not individual weapons but how the United States fights wars as a system: integrating satellites, AI tools, intelligence networks, and precision strikes to identify and eliminate high-value targets.China is observing surveillance patterns, command-and-control responses, missile defense operations, and the timing of strikes to reconstruct U.S. operational behavior for application in a future Indo-Pacific conflict.The decapitation question has particular relevance for Taiwan. A PLA Navy-affiliated journal published in November outlined how precision strikes on Taipei’s leadership structure could force rapid capitulation. The Iran conflict is now complicating that calculation. Chinese analysts observe that the removal of a large portion of Iran’s top political and military leadership, including the supreme leader, has not collapsed the regime. Iran’s governance structure, succession mechanisms, and geographic depth have allowed it to absorb those losses and continue fighting.Max Lo, executive director of the Taiwan International Strategic Study Society, stated that ‘the lesson from Tehran is that decapitation is not the end of the war but the beginning of a much more chaotic one.’ Beijing’s takeaway is that decapitation strikes are one component of a broader campaign, not a decisive strategy on their own. In a Taiwan scenario, Chinese planners would treat such strikes as supporting actions within a larger amphibious operation.The ability of the PLA to fully process these lessons is complicated by an ongoing leadership crisis. A report from the Center for Strategic and International Studies estimates that more than half of PLA leadership has been affected by Xi Jinping’s purges. Of the 47 individuals who have held three-star positions or above since 2022, 41 have reportedly been removed, including those purged after retirement. Only 11 of 52 key positions are currently occupied. This leadership vacuum exists at the moment the PLA most needs experienced officers to analyze and integrate what it is observing.Irrespective of the outcome of the Iran war, China will have extracted more from several weeks of American combat operations than it could have gained through any other means, without spending a dollar on the conflict itself. The post China’s People’s Liberation Army Watching and Learning from the U.S.-Iran Conflict appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.