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Wednesday, July 20, 2005

CNN.com - U.S.: China looking beyond Taiwan - Jul 19, 2005

CNN.com - U.S.: China looking beyond Taiwan - Jul 19, 2005U.S.: China looking beyond Taiwan

WASHINGTON (AP) -- China cannot be certain that its military, while steadily strengthening, is capable of conquering Taiwan, the Pentagon said Tuesday in a new report on Chinese military power and strategy.

Over the longer term, however, an increasingly modernizing Chinese military could pose a threat to U.S. and other forces in the Asia-Pacific region, it said.

"Some of China's military planners are surveying the strategic landscape beyond Taiwan," the report said.

Among a number of such developments, it noted improvements in Chinese intercontinental-range missiles "capable of striking targets across the globe, including the United States."

Air and naval force improvements also appear to be geared for operations beyond the geography around Taiwan, an island less than 160 kilometers (100 miles) off the Chinese coast, it added.

Fueled by a booming economy and foreign arms purchases, China's military is developing new capabilities in line with Beijing's strategy of deterring Taiwan from declaring its independence and countering a potential U.S. military intervention, according to the 45-page report, an annual assessment required by Congress.

The short-term focus of China's military was to prepare for potential conflict in the Taiwan Strait, the report said.

China claims Taiwan as part of its territory and has threatened to invade if the self-governing island declares formal independence or resists Beijing's insistence on negotiating reunification. The United States, Taiwan's main arms supplier, has cautioned both countries not to force a change in the status quo.

Kurt Campbell, a senior Asia specialist at the Pentagon during the Clinton administration, said in an interview that the report was "slightly more alarmist" than previous Pentagon assessments of China's military.

He noted that the report focused on a number of new Chinese capabilities, including a naval buildup.

U.S. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said Tuesday, before the report was released, that it would illustrate why a European arms embargo against the Chinese should be kept in place.

Some members of the European Union, including France, have sought to end the embargo, which was imposed after the Chinese military crushed student protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989.

It "clearly points up the reason that the president and the United States government have been urging the EU to not lift the arms embargo on the People's Republic of China," Rumsfeld told reporters at the Pentagon.

At the White House, President George W. Bush said at a joint news conference with Australian Prime Minister John Howard that the United States had a relationship with China that was "very important and very vibrant. It's a good relationship, but it's a complex relationship."

Bush said the United States and Australia "can work together to reinforce the need for China to accept certain values as universal: the value of minority rights, the value of freedom for people to speak, the value of freedom of religion -- the same values we share."

The House, while debating a State Department bill Tuesday, accepted without dissent an amendment to approve sanctions to deter foreign companies and nations, particularly in Europe, from selling arms to China.

The House defeated a similar bill last week, but changes were made to reassure American defense contractors that they would not be subject to penalties unless they knowingly should transfer technologies that could potentially have military applications.

The new assessment of China's military said reasons existed to believe that China would not take military action against Taiwan.

"It does not yet possess the military capability to accomplish with confidence its political objectives on the island, particularly when confronted with outside intervention," it said.

Chinese leaders also believed that attacking Taiwan would severely retard China's economic development and lead to instability on the mainland.

Rumsfeld said China was at a strategic crossroad.

"As I see it, China is on a path where they are determined to increase their economy, the opportunities for their people, and to enter the world community," Rumsfeld said.

He said the Chinese had been doing "a number of things to leave the world with the impression that they are a good place for investment."

China needed to be more open, politically as well as economically, Rumsfeld said, in order to be seen internationally as a more welcome partner.

"To the extent the political system does not (open up), it will inhibit the growth of their economy and ultimately the growth of their military capabilities," he said.

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