|
State media, including the People’s Daily (人民日報), reported on the 28th that the State Council and the Central Military Commission submitted the draft amendment to the 22nd meeting of the Standing Committee of the 14th National People’s Congress (NPC) the day before.
The State Council said the revisions aim to strengthen national defense development, complete the national defense mobilization system, and protect the country’s sovereignty, unity, territorial integrity, security, and development interests.
The National Defense Mobilization Law, enacted in 2010, governs the mobilization of national resources during wartime and emergencies and sets out the rights and duties of citizens and organizations. It underpins China’s defense capabilities. This revision is the first major overhaul since the law took effect.
In practice, both the domestic and international environment surrounding defense mobilization and the People’s Liberation Army’s missions have shifted significantly. From Beijing’s point of view, existing legal provisions no longer fully reflect those changes.
The draft centers on explicitly embedding the Party’s military line in law. It states that national defense mobilization will “uphold the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party, base itself on Xi Jinping’s (習近平) thinking on strengthening the military, and implement a holistic national security concept and a new-era military strategy.” The provision is intended to convert Party policy into state policy and coordinated public action through formal legal channels.
The revision also aligns with a broader push to tighten China’s defense legal framework. Beijing recently updated the National Defense Law, the Military Service Law, the Military Facility Protection Law, and the National Defense Education Law. It has also moved forward with laws covering the coast guard and reserve personnel. Officials say those steps required adjustments to ensure legal consistency and to align statutes with a restructured mobilization system.
State-run Xinhua News Agency said the current National Defense Mobilization Law “played an important role in strengthening mobilization systems and improving capabilities since it took effect in July 2010,” but added that some provisions no longer meet new conditions and demands, making revision and supplementation necessary. Analysts say the changes also reflect a growing urgency to prepare strategies for reunification with Taiwan and to respond to U.S. actions.












Most Commented