(BBC)China is set to showcase its military might in a lavish parade, unprecedented in its scale, to mark the defeat of Japan in World War Two.
Some 12,000 troops and 200 aircraft, as well as tanks and missiles, will go on display in Tiananmen Square in Beijing.
President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan are greeting foreign dignitaries who are arriving for the parade.
China's growing military capabilities will be keenly watched amid tensions in the region.
Mr Xi, who is also commander of the armed forces, will be centre stage at the proceedings along with more than 30 foreign government officials and heads of state.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, South Korea's President Park Geun-hye and, controversially, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon will be the biggest names in attendance.
Many major leaders, including from the US, UK, Australia and Japan, have shunned the event.
"During a period of strained relations between China and Japan, as well as increasing military tension in the Asia-Pacific region, some leaders are reluctant to be associated with what they may view as a nationalistic, anti-Japanese mass rally," said Alexander Neill from the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) in Singapore.
The BBC's China editor, Carrie Gracie, in Tiananmen Square, says the skies are perfectly blue rather than smoggy - after factories were closed, barbecues banned and cars stopped from travelling.
There are no balloons or pigeons around the square in case they disrupt the fly-past of military aircraft, she says.
China's victory parade is designed to be a grandiose demonstration of the country's military prowess. But it's also a useful opportunity for the Chinese military to showcase its wares.
A few months ago, China surpassed Germany to become the world's third largest arms supplier, according to the Stockholm Peace Institute.
"That shows the intention to showcase the progress of China's arms industry," explains Mathieu Duchâtel, head of the China and Global Security Project with the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
"In terms of exports, it will indicate the move of China as a major arms importer to a major exporter."
Arms sales from China have soared 150% in the past five years. For the first time, all of the armaments shown during the parade will be Chinese-made, with no Russian-made weapons on display.
In April, the Chinese signed a deal to supply eight new submarines to Pakistan - the most expensive arms deal in Chinese history. There is also a possible deal in the works to sell Chinese submarines to Thailand.
The parade is not quite the same as an arms fair, but representatives from China's closest military allies will be on hand as China's latest weaponry streams past them.
In the build-up to the event, state media have been publishing commentaries that reinforce Chinese patriotism and views on historical events.
Japan launched a full-scale invasion of China in 1937 and, according to Beijing, eight years of fighting claimed 14 million Chinese lives.
China also claims that it is the "forgotten ally" and that its role in defeating Japan has been underplayed in the post-war narrative.
Nationalist forces led the fight against Japan in China. They were defeated by Mao Zedong's Communists who proclaimed a people's republic in 1949.
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