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China protests US missile fuse flub
BEIJING—China on Wednesday strongly protested the U.S. military’s
mistaken delivery to Taiwan of intercontinental ballistic missile
electrical fuses, demanding an investigation and steps to “eliminate the
negative effects and disastrous consequences.”
In a statement posted on the ministry’s Web site, Foreign Ministry
spokesman Qin Gang said China had brought a “serious representation” to
Washington and expressed “strong displeasure” over the error.
The U.S. Defense Department said Tuesday that the Air Force had
mistakenly shipped to Taiwan four electrical fuses designed for use on
intercontinental ballistic missiles. The fuses have since been recovered
and an investigation launched.
While the shipment did not include nuclear materials, the error is
particularly sensitive because Beijing vehemently opposes U.S. arms
sales to Taiwan, the self-governed island that China considers its own
territory. Four of the cone-shaped fuses were shipped to Taiwanese
officials in fall 2006 instead of the helicopter batteries they had
ordered.
“We ... demand the U.S. side thoroughly investigate this matter, and
report to China in a timely matter the details of the situation and
eliminate the negative effects and disastrous consequences created by
this incident,” the statement said.
Qin again demanded an end to such weapons sales and military-to-military
contacts between Washington and Taipei in order to “avoid damaging peace
and stability in the Taiwan Strait and the healthy development of China-U.S.
relations.” —Agencies
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