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China, US
agree to improve military ties
From Max Lee
The Daily Mail’s
Special Correspondent in Beijing
BEIJING—China and the United States agreed to improve military ties
after US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld warned that a rapid and
secretive military buildup was sending “mixed signals” about China’s
intentions, US officials said.
President Hu Jintao told Rumsfeld that although the military
relationship had improved over the years there was still room to expand,
senior US defense officials told reporters.
“All this will better help military forces of our two countries to
better enhance mutual understanding and friendship,” Hu said said in the
meeting in the Great Hall of the People. Rumsfeld earlier made an
unprecedented visit to the headquarters of the Strategic Rocket Forces
whose commander, General Jing Zhiyuan, assured him of China’s policy of
“no first use” of nuclear weapons, the officials said.
The officials interpreted the comments as a disavowal of a statement in
June by General Zhu Chenghu who said that if US forces targeted China in
a crisis over Taiwan, “I think we will have to respond with nuclear
weapons”.
Jing told Rumsfeld suggestions that China was targeting other nations
were “completely groundless,” a senior US official who attended the
meeting said.
“As commander of the strategic forces reporting to the Central Military
Command I’m in a position to clarify this,” the official quoted Jing as
saying. The US officials regarded the visit to the Strategic Rocket
Forces headquarters as something of a coup, saying the Chinese for years
had denied requests to visit.
Rumsfeld was told he was the first foreigner to set foot in the
building, they said. He was briefed on the organizational structure of
the command by Jing’s senior staff. “I think it’s a start,” another
senior US defense official said. “There were some interesting things we
may want to pursue”.
“We certainly took it as a willingness to engage, albeit gingerly,” he
said.
Earlier, Rumsfeld and Defense Minister Cao Guangchuan agreed “in
principal” on the need for more educational exchanges and other types of
military-to-military activities.
Rumsfeld said the contacts were needed “to demystify what we see of them
and what they see of us.” In his talks with Cao and in an earlier
seminar at a school that grooms future Communist Party leaders, Rumsfeld
warned that China’s rapid and secretive military buildup had raised
questions about its intentions.
Cao denied China had understated its military spending and insisted that
raising the living standards of the country’s poor made it “impossible
to massively increase” military spending. He said Chinese military
spending this year totalled about 30 billion dollars, although he
acknowledged that the space program and other equipment spending was
outside the defense budget.
“That is the true budget we have today,” he said. The Pentagon in July
estimated the true size of Chinese defense spending at 90 billion
dollars a year, with much of it going to sophisticated weaponry that
will enable China to project power in the Asia-Pacific region.
Rumsfeld said Washington wanted a constructive relationship with
Beijing, but was uncertain whether China “will make the right choices —
choices that will serve the world’s real interests in regional peace and
security”.
“Many countries, for example, have questions about the pace and the
scope of China’s military expansion,” he told faculty and students at
the elite Central Party School. “A growth in China’s power projection
understandably leads other nations to question China’s intentions, and
to adjust their behavior in some fashion,” he said.
“The rapid, and — from our perspective at least — non-transparent nature
of this buildup contributes to their uncertainty.” In a question and
answer session following his speech, Rumsfeld rejected claims that there
were different voices in Washington on how to deal with China. Instead,
he said the different voices were coming from China.
“We see mixed signals and we are seeking clarification,” he said. The
visit, Rumsfeld’s first to China as defense secretary, is likely to set
the tone for President George W. Bush’s visit here next month.
It comes nearly five years after a collision between a US Navy
surveillance plane and a Chinese fighter blew up into an major crisis
between the two powers. A Pentagon report in July said the military
buildup was tipping the balance against Taiwan and threatened the
broader military balance in the region.
Defense officials said Taiwan was mentioned only briefly in the talks.
But the island is the most immediate potential source of conflict.
Beijing, which claims it as a renegade provinces, asserts the right to
retake it by force, and the United States has pledged to aid Taiwan’s
defense.
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