BEIJING  - Making online friends could play into the hands of the "enemy",  according to China's People's Liberation Army, which has said its  roughly 2.3 million soldiers will be banned from using social media.
The world's largest military force has notified service men and women  that it will strictly enforce the ban to "safeguard military secrets and  the purity and solidarity" of the PLA, state media said this week.
The People's Liberation Daily, the armed forces' official newspaper,  said passing on personal details such as a soldier's address, duties or  contact details could risk revealing the location of military bases.
It added that particular risks exist in users posting photos of  themselves, such as during training, which could divulge military  capabilities and equipment.
The ban was included in regulations announced last year that proscribed  soldiers from launching websites or writing blogs, the paper added.
But in a sign that the ban was apparently being ignored in a country  where social media are wildly popular, the military brass has taken the  step of re-emphasizing the restriction, warning of a "grim struggle" on  the Internet.
Officers and soldiers must be made to understand the "real dangers" of  making friends online and to "strengthen their knowledge of the enemy  situation," it said, without elaborating.
China has nearly half a billion online users, according to official  figures, and Chinese-language social media sites similar to Facebook and  Twitter - which are blocked by the country's censors - count hundreds  of millions of users.
The newspaper last week said China's military has set up an elite  Internet security task force tasked with fending off cyberattacks, while  denying that the initiative is intended to create a "hacker army."
The United States, Australia, Germany and other Western nations have  long alleged that hackers inside China are carrying out a wide range of  cyberattacks on government and corporate computer systems worldwide.
