viernes, 17 de junio de 2022

viernes, junio 17, 2022

China fires back at US claims of aggression as it admits to developing new weapons

Defence minister Wei Fenghe says annexation of Taiwan ‘must be achieved’ at Asian security forum

Kathrin Hille and Demetri Sevastopulo in Singapore

China’s defence minister Wei Fenghe said it was ‘natural’ that the country would be developing new weapons — the closest Beijing has come to confirming special hypersonic missile tests © How Hwee Young/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock


China’s defence minister has strongly pushed back against US accusations of aggression, and sought to present Beijing as a responsible power and western countries as outsiders undermining stability in Asia.

The stance came as Beijing tried to avoid a further escalation in tensions over Taiwan, after a meeting between General Wei Fenghe and US defence secretary Lloyd Austin on Friday that was dominated by discussions about the island that were described as “frank, positive and constructive”.

Austin had also warned Beijing against “a steady increase in provocative and destabilising military activity near Taiwan”, telling the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue security conference in Singapore on Saturday that the US would maintain “our own capacity to resist any use of force” against the country.

In his own address on Sunday, Wei said China aimed to be “a builder of world peace, a contributor to global development, a protector of the international order and a provider of public goods”, using a keynote phrase coined by Chinese president Xi Jinping.

Wei’s remarks came as defence and foreign policy officials and analysts at the forum confronted China over the threats against Taiwan, aggressive interceptions of western countries’ military aircraft in the South China Sea and ambitions to build footholds for its expanding armed forces.

China’s message regarding Taiwan remained inflexible but not more belligerent than usual. 

Wei claimed that it was “China’s Taiwan” and reiterated that Beijing perceived annexation of the island as a historic mission that “absolutely must be achieved” and for which its military would be ready to fight.

But Wei said peaceful unification remained “the biggest hope of the Chinese people, and we continue to hold the greatest sincerity and are willing to make the biggest effort” to achieve it.

“Wei laid out a fairly compressive position that I viewed as firm, but didn’t break any new ground,” said Bonnie Glaser, director of the Asia Program at the German Marshall Fund. 

“He repeated the statement [China’s president] Xi [Jinping] made to [Joe] Biden last November that China will do its utmost to pursue peaceful reunification.”

However, China’s mild messaging also belied a position that remained hardline in substance. 

One US official said People’s Liberation Army officers had told their US counterparts in recent months that the Taiwan Strait was not international waters. 

“That sounds like a new position, and has operational implications,” Glaser said.

While Beijing has in the past mostly complained about US support for Taiwan, Wei also objected that “other countries” were interfering in China’s affairs over the island.

“He put out a veiled statement acknowledging they are watching what other countries are doing in support of Taiwan,” said Meia Nouwens, an expert on the Chinese military at IISS, the think-tank and organiser of the conference.

Wei also defended the PLA’s rapid modernisation and expansion.

He said it was natural that China was developing new weapons, when asked by the Financial Times about a highly advanced Chinese hypersonic weapon test in July 2021 that shocked the Pentagon.

“Many countries are testing weapons. 

There is no surprise that China is doing so,” Wei said. 

“These weapons are for protecting the national interest of China . . . It is natural for us to have some new weapons.”

The FT reported last year that the PLA had tested a nuclear-capable hypersonic weapon that flew around the world and fired a missile as it flew over the South China Sea.

The Chinese foreign ministry previously denied the FT report, saying China had tested a space plane. 

Wei’s comments marked the closest Beijing has come to confirming the hypersonic weapons test.

“[General] Wei has acknowledged that the test last year was a weapons demonstration, contradicting earlier alibis from the foreign ministry,” said Ankit Panda, a nuclear expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. 

“The subtext to his comments is that we should expect more such tests, perhaps, as China continues to modernise.”

“We still don’t understand whether China intends to field such a weapon, however,” he added.

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