Top Chinese general backs greater ties with US military

China's military sought to assure the United States yesterday that its arms buildup was not a threat and said Beijing wanted to expand cooperation with the Pentagon to reduce the risk of future conflicts. At the start of a visit to Washington, Xu...

China's military sought to assure the United States yesterday that its arms buildup was not a threat and said Beijing wanted to expand cooperation with the Pentagon to reduce the risk of future conflicts.

At the start of a visit to Washington, Xu Caihou, vice chairman of the People's Liberation Army Central Military Commission, said military ties were generally moving in a "positive direction" and defended China's fast-paced military development as purely "defensive" and "limited" in scope.

"We are now predominantly committed to peaceful development and we will not and could not challenge or threaten any other country" and "certainly not the United States," Mr Xu told a Washington think tank ahead of talks with US Defence Secretary Robert Gates.

Mr Xu described China's development of advanced weapons systems, including cruise and ballistic missiles, as "entirely for self-defence" and justified "given the vast area of China, the severity of the challenges facing us."

"As you know, China has yet to realise complete unification," Mr Xu said, in an apparent reference to Taiwan, which China considers a renegade province. "So I believe it is simply necessary for the PLA to have an appropriate level of modernity in terms of our weapons and equipment."

Mr Xu's visit, which will include a tour of major US military bases, including US Strategic Command, was meant to give a boost to military-to-military dialogue, which Beijing resumed this year after halting it in 2008 to protest a $6.5 billion US arms sale to Taiwan.

US officials have expressed alarm about what they see as China's unprecedented military expansion over the past year. Last week, Mr Gates said better dialogue was needed to avoid "mistakes and miscalculations".

"I want to make clear that the limited weapons and equipment of China is entirely to meet the minimum requirements for meeting national security," Mr Xu said through a translator. He said military mechanisation was still at an early stage. "China's defence policy remains defensive" and was designed to repel attacks, not initiate attacks, he said. "We will never seek hegemony... military expansion."

Chinese vessels have confronted US surveillance ships in Asian waters repeatedly this year and Beijing has called on the US to reduce and eventually halt air and sea military surveillance close to its shores.

Mr Xu said those US missions "infringed upon Chinese interests". Mr Xu said US-Chinese military relations have improved since President Barack Obama took office in January and can be expanded further.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.