|
Major step in military opening
Beijing—China Sunday took two
important steps toward increasing the transparency of its military, with
announcements that the nation will provide the United Nations with
details of its military spending and its trade in conventional weapons.
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said China has decided to
participate in the UN Military Transparency Mechanism, under which the
country will report each year to the UN secretary-general on its
military expenditure for the latest fiscal year. The country will also
resume providing data on its imports and exports of seven categories of
conventional weapons to the United Nations Register of Conventional Arms
starting this year, said Jiang, whose remarks were posted on the Foreign
Ministry’s website.
These are two important decisions made by the Chinese government to
increase the country’s military transparency, she said. Jiang emphasized
that China had made important contributions toward the establishment and
development of the UN Register of Conventional Arms, and provided data
required by the register each year.
But it was forced to suspend its reporting in 1996, when “a certain
country”, which she declined to name, provided data on its arms sales to
China’s Taiwan Province to the register. This contradicted the spirit of
the relevant resolutions of the UN General Assembly and the objectives
and principles of the register, she said.
As the country concerned has ceased the above-mentioned behavior, the
Chinese government has decided to resume providing the data. “I would
like to reiterate that the Chinese government has all along taken a
prudent and responsible attitude to its arms exports, and implemented
strict controls on such exports according to its international
obligations and domestic laws and regulations,” Jiang said.
She said the “two decisions demonstrate that China pursues a security
concept based on mutual trust, mutual benefit, equality and cooperation,
and supports the important role played by the UN in promoting
transparency in armaments and mutual trust in the field of security
among nations”. Military strategy expert Peng Guangqian said that the
decisions are a further example of China’s long-time policy of military
transparency, and “were not made as a result of pressure from any other
country”.
“China is highly transparent in terms of military policies and security
strategy, as reflected in its commitment to no-first-use of nuclear
weapons,” Peng told China Daily. But Peng noted: “Transparency will
always be relative. The key point is mutual trust.” Responding to some
Western concerns about China’s increased military expenditure, which
stood at 351 billion yuan ($46.4 billion) this year, a year-on-year
increase of 17.8 percent, Peng said: “China needs to safeguard itself
because there are still so many destabilizing factors in the world,
including terrorism, separatism and extremism.”—Xinhua |