 The U.S. isn’t the only military with designs on invading the smartphone world. China’s armed forces are starting to fill the app gap with a new iPhone program from the People’s Liberation Army.
The U.S. isn’t the only military with designs on invading the smartphone world. China’s armed forces are starting to fill the app gap with a new iPhone program from the People’s Liberation Army.
China’s Ministry of Defense announced Monday that it was releasing an official app for iPhones and iPads to let users keep up on People’s Liberation Army (PLA) goings-on. It’s a newsreader app that lets users view press releases, pictures and video from official military outlets like the PLA Daily newspaper and China’s Ministry of Defense.
Peng Guangqian, a retired PLA general and a strategist at China’s Academy of Military Science, told the state-run newspaper China Daily that cooperation with a cool company like Apple will help the military be more hip and transparent.
Despite what Guangqian says, the PLA isn’t exactly cooperating with Apple on its news app. Quite the opposite, actually. Try looking for it in the app store and you won’t find it. Why? It’s only available on jailbroken iPhones. Some news outlets speculate that China may have chafed at Apple’s stringent app development rules for its mobile military mouthpiece.
An app that soaks up official news feeds and spits them out on iPhones probably isn’t what Pentagon officials had in mind when they pestered China’s military for greater transparency. Not that a lot of American military types are likely to install the PLA app anyway. China has been suspected of a number of hacking incidents, from a break-in on an unclassified Pentagon network to a recent attack against mega contractor Lockheed Martin. Given the history, installing PLA software on your mobile device would likely be a big security faux pas.
Putting the PLA app on iOS, Apple’s mobile operating system, make sense given the popularity of Apple mobile devices in China, now the world’s second largest market for iPhone apps. There’s no word yet on a companion app for the rival Android mobile operating system. (Although the PLA may not want to go there, given China’s ongoing feud with Android’s developer, Google.)
But don’t worry, America. The Defense Department may not have completely embraced smartphones yet, but we’re still number one in mobile technology compared to China. The Army and Navy have had their own apps with news and recruiting info for a while now. Contractors are also looking to sell apps for use on the battlefield, offering up programs like the SoldierEyes Common Operating Picture and the Raytheon Advanced Tactical Systems that let troops track the position of their buddies in the field. For it’s part, the Army’s also toying with its own app store and Android-based smartphone for soldier.
Photo: Ministry of Defense, People’s Republic of China
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