Chinese Military Will Replace Windows Operating System

Chinese Military Will Replace Windows Operating System
A man taking pictures of internet security data displayed on a screen at the Qihoo booth during the 4th World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, Zhejiang Province, China. (AFP/Getty Images)
5/27/2019
Updated:
5/27/2019

The Chinese regime is getting ready to replace the Windows operating system in its military. The new operating system is independently developed by China, and it would prevent the United States from hacking into China’s military network.

An “Internet Security Information Leadership Group” was established to perform the task of replacing the Windows operating system, according to a report published on May 11 by Canada-based military magazine Kanwa Asian Defence.

The group does not trust the “UNIX” multi-user, multi-stroke operating system either, which is used in some of the servers within the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), Kanwa reported. Therefore, Chinese authorities ordered to develop an operating system dedicated to the Chinese military.

The group also believes that the German-developed programmable logic controller (PLC), used in 70 percent of China’s industrial control system today, poses huge risks to China’s national security. In its opinion, China is not a “network superpower,” but merely a “network giant,” Kanwa reported. Therefore, Chinese authorities have laid out plans to upgrade China’s network—to become more advanced in cyber technology.

The Kanwa report quoted Washington-based experts on Chinese military research as saying that the newly formed PLA’s internet information leadership group has higher authority than the network departments in various military units, and it is directly under the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). The United States separated the network security division from the U.S. National Security to become the United States Cyber Command in April 2018. China is probably following suit in the establishment of this leadership group.