PLA admiral’s speech raises questions in
the US
By William Lowther
STAFF REPORTER , WASHINGTON
Thursday, Jun 10, 2010, Page 1
A senior Chinese admiral delivered a three-minute “rant” to
65 visiting US officials in Beijing last month, in which he said that US arms
sales to Taiwan proved that Washington viewed China as an enemy.
Since then, US diplomats and US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates have tried to
portray the remarks by Rear Admiral Guan Youfei (關友飛) as at odds with the
thinking of the rest of the Chinese government.
But in a Washington Post report published on Tuesday, Post reporter John Pomfret
interviewed a wide range of experts, officials and military officers in China
who indicated that Guan’s speech on May 24 as part of a two-day US-China
Strategic and Economic Dialogue represented the mainstream views of the Chinese
Communist Party.
It was the first time that this had been reported in the US.
“Perhaps the real outliers might be those in China’s government who want to side
with the United States,” the Post said.
“Guan’s speech underscored that 31 years after the United States and China
normalized relations, there remains a deep distrust in Beijing. That the United
States is trying to keep China down is a central part of the party’s catechism
and a foundation of its claims to legitimacy,” the paper said.
Despite intense efforts, Gates was unable to secure an invitation to visit
Beijing when he was in Asia last week and blamed elements within the People’s
Liberation Army (PLA) for blocking an invitation, which the civilian leadership
wanted to deliver.
But a PLA general who spoke on condition of anonymity told the Post: “It’s silly
to talk about factions when it comes to relations with the United States. The
army follows the party. Do you really think that Guan did this unilaterally?”
Repeating Guan’s words, Major General Zhu Chenghu (朱成虎) told Gates: “You, the
Americans, are taking China as the enemy.”
Zhu rose to prominence in China in 2005 after he warned that if the US came to
Taiwan’s defense in a war with China, Beijing would abandon its “no first use”
doctrine on nuclear weapons and attack the US, the Post said.
China was conducting a “concerted campaign” to change the US’ security
relationship with Taiwan, the paper said.
“At the very least, Chinese officials said, they want the Obama administration
to reiterate a commitment it made in a joint communique with China in 1982 to
decrease arms sales to Taiwan,” the paper said.
Chinese analysts warned that US President Barack Obama would ignore “core
national interests” — especially on US weapons sales to Taiwan — at his “peril,”
the newspaper said.
It quoted Cui Liru (崔立如), head of the China Institutes of Contemporary
International Relations, as saying: “For years China has opposed arms sales to
Taiwan among other things, but we were never strong enough to do anything about
it.
“But our national strength has grown. And it is time that the United States pay
attention. It is something that must be dealt with or it will seriously damage
ties,” Cui said.
This comes as Republican and conservative elements in Washington are pushing the
White House to sell F-16C/D aircraft to Taipei.
The Wall Street Journal praised Gates in an editorial on Tuesday for talking
frankly about how China’s military expansion threatens peace and security.
At the annual Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, Gates said there was growing
concern about China’s behavior in the South China Sea and that the Pentagon
objected to any effort to intimidate US corporations or “those of any nation
engaged in legitimate economic activity.”
The Journal said: “Gates’s comments suggest the Pentagon thinks it’s time to
draw brighter lines around this kind of misbehavior. That will come as a relief
to such US treaty allies as Taiwan and Japan, which depend on the US security
umbrella to counter China’s military buildup.”
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