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US exaggerates China defense
WASHINGTON—The United States
has been exaggerating China’s nuclear clout in a process that could lock
the two into a Cold War-style arms race, two arms-control advocacy
groups said in a report Thursday.
The Defense Department and US intelligence agencies have portrayed
Chinese weapons developments as more threatening than warranted, to
justify building a new generation of weapons, according to the study by
the Federation of American Scientists and the Natural Resources Defense
Council.
“The report’s main finding is that the Pentagon and others routinely
highlight specific incidents out of context that inaccurately portray a
looming Chinese threat,” the groups said in a statement. Specifically,
they said, the Defense Department and US intelligence agencies had been
“embellishing China’s submarine and long-range missile capabilities.”
China, in turn, views US arms upgrades as a reason for modernizing its
arsenal, said the 250-page report, which is based on an analysis of
declassified and unclassified US government documents as well as
commercial satellite images of Chinese installations.
This could pitch the two into “a dangerous action-and-reaction
competition reminiscent of the Cold War,” the two groups said. But they
said China was unlikely to build large nuclear forces of its own despite
a desire to make its arsenal more powerful.
“Military planners always need a rationale — a real or potential danger
— for why they must have new weapons or new strategies and plans,” said
the study, “Chinese Nuclear Forces and US Nuclear War Planning.”
“With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, which occupied that role for
almost 50 years, the United States has turned its attention to China to
help fill the vacuum,” it said. The report faulted China for cloaking
its nuclear forces in secrecy, amid what it portrayed as a US government
scare campaign bolstered by conservative media and think tanks.
Beijing has not made clear of the scale, scope and purpose of its
military modernization, it said, adding: “Inflated and worst-case
descriptions of China’s nuclear programs feed on the lack of
information.”
The Pentagon and the office of the Director of National Intelligence had
no immediate comment.
The report said the US arsenal of about 10,000 nuclear weapons dwarfed
China’s roughly 200 and would continue to do so.
In a long-range planning document published in February, the Pentagon
sounded an alarm at China’s investments in “sophisticated land and
sea-based (nuclear strike) systems.” The threat puts a premium on
developing US forces “capable of sustained operations at great distances
into denied areas,” the Pentagon’s planning review said.
China is about to field three new long-range ballistic missiles that US
intelligence says were developed in response to Washington’s deployment
of more-accurate Trident II sea-launched ballistic missiles. China has
about 20 ballistic missiles capable of reaching the continental United
States; the United States has more than 830 missiles — most with
multiple warheads — that can hit China, it added. “China is no Soviet
Union,” said Robert Norris, a Natural Resources Defense Council analyst
and a report co-author. He said the Pentagon had been using China to
justify buying new missiles, destroyers, submarines and fighter planes.
—People’s Daliy, Daily Mail news exchange item |