Saturday, December 15, 2001 2:17 PM
SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

Saturday, December 15, 2001

Jiang backs Putin on axed arms treaty
Leaders reinforce support for 'strategic balance' in last-minute phone call


AGENCIES
  
Prev. Story <http://china.scmp.com/ZZZWG9K0YUC.html>  | Next Story
<http://china.scmp.com/ZZZODI91YUC.html>


President Jiang Zemin and Russian President Vladimir Putin held
consultations immediately before the United States announced it would pull
out of the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) treaty.

State media said Mr Jiang received phone calls from Mr Putin and US
President George W. Bush while he was visiting Myanmar.

Mr Jiang told Mr Putin China believed that under the present global
situation it was important to maintain the existing international regimes on
arms control and arms reduction, Xinhua said.

Mr Jiang and Mr Putin discussed the issue just before Mr Bush issued his
statement on Thursday that the US would abandon the treaty in order to
deploy a missile defence system, the People's Daily said.

A Kremlin spokeswoman said the two men exchanged views that showed the same
approach towards "supporting the strategic balance in the world and
preserving international stability and security".

Interfax news agency quoted Mr Putin's press secretary as saying that the
Kremlin leader had also discussed the US move with Indian Prime Minister
Atal Behari Vajpayee.

Russia's lower house of parliament yesterday rejected a resolution
condemning the US withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. The
draft resolution reflected Russian politicians' displeasure following Mr
Bush's announcement.

Mr Putin stressed that he considered Mr Bush's decision a mistake but that
Russia's own security would not be damaged.

Mr Jiang urged Mr Bush in the phone call to preserve the international
arms-control system. "China will make its own efforts to work with every
nation of the world to continue to uphold world peace and stability," Mr
Jiang was quoted as saying.

Beijing worries that Mr Bush's plans to develop a missile defence system
will undercut the deterrent value of its small nuclear arsenal.

Mainland officials have warned that Beijing might respond by building more
nuclear missiles or trying to make its existing missiles more accurate.

Both Beijing and Moscow have viewed the ABM treaty as the cornerstone of the
global strategic balance and strongly oppose the unilateral withdrawal of
the US from the treaty and the planned missile defence shield.

China's Foreign Ministry expressed "concern" at the US announcement and
called on the US for new security dialogue to discuss Washington's missile
defence initiative.

"We've taken note of the relevant reports and express our concern,"
spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue said. "China is not in favour of missile defence
systems. 

"We hope the US will heed seriously the opinion of other countries and
cautiously handle this issue."

The US was ready to hold a dialogue with China but details had yet to be
set, a US administration official said.

Mr Bush spoke to Mr Jiang on Thursday morning, the White House said.

A fledgling strategic partnership between China and Russia has been largely
based on fears of an over-dominant America in the post-Cold War era and has
centred on joint opposition to US plans to build a national missile shield.

The proposed shield is illegal under the ABM treaty. Beijing is also
concerned the shield could one day be extended to East Asia and cover
Taiwan. 
 
Saturday, December 15, 2001

Scrapping nuclear deal spells trouble


RAY CHEUNG
 
Prev. Story <http://china.scmp.com/ZZZ0MFN0YUC.html>


Washington's abandonment of the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) treaty
could cause strategic problems for Beijing.

The move will pave the way for the US administration's plan to develop its
proposed missile defence system without any treaty violations. And if the
system is a success, China's small nuclear missile arsenal could be rendered
useless. 

According to Washington's Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, China
is estimated to have only about 20 missiles that can reach American shores,
while the United States has 5,949 warheads on 1,238 missiles and bombers all
capable of hitting Chinese targets.

Beijing is worried not only about missile defence but the enormous
ramifications the US withdrawal will have on international nuclear arms
control. 

Professor Li Bin, director of the arms control programme at Beijing's
Tsinghua University, said: "Our goal is to develop our economy, which needs
a peaceful global environment and a stable global military equilibrium. With
the US leaving the ABM treaty, it has broken this stability."

Beijing fears the Bush administration's action will mean nations will no
longer agree to any nuclear disarmament control treaties. This could push
China into a regional arms race with India and Pakistan.

China would have to divert resources from economic development to building
up its military strength, which it is loathe to do.

"We have enough domestic concerns. An arms race is only a rich man's game. A
poor man cannot play," said Professor Niu Jun, American foreign policy
expert at Beijing University's Institute of International Studies.

In the past few years, Beijing has expanded its defence budget. It was
announced this year that China would increase military spending by 17.7 per
cent to US$17.19 billion (HK$133.7 billion), the largest rise in history.
 
 
 
 
_________________________________________________
 
KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi
 
General class struggle news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe mails to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Geopolitical news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__________________________________________________


Reply via email to