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Defense Minister: China preparing for World War III PDF Print E-mail

China is preparing for World War III conflicts 'in every direction', the
defence minister said on Wednesday in remarks that threaten to
overshadow a visit to Beijing by his US counterpart next month.

By Peter Foster, Beijing 1:30PM GMT 29 Dec 2010

"In the coming five years, our military will push forward preparations
for military conflict in every strategic direction," said Liang Guanglie
in an interview published by several state-backed newspapers in China.
"We may be living in peaceful times, but we can never forget war, never
send the horses south or put the bayonets and guns away," Mr Liang added.

China repeatedly says it is planning a "peaceful rise" but the recent
pace and scale of its military modernisation has alarmed many of its
neighbours in the Asia-Pacific, including Japan which described China's
military build-up as a "global concern" this month.

Mr Liang's remarks come at a time of increasingly difficult relations
between the Chinese and US armed forces which a three-day visit by his
counterpart Robert Gates is intended to address. A year ago China froze
substantive military relations in protest at US arms sales to Taiwan and
relations deteriorated further this summer when China objected to US
plans to deploy one of its nuclear supercarriers, the USS George
Washington, into the Yellow Sea off the Korean peninsula.

China also announced this month that it was preparing to launch its own
aircraft carrier next year in a signal that China is determined to punch
its weight as a rising superpower. The news came a year earlier than
many US defence analysts had predicted.

China is also working on a "carrier-killing" ballistic missile that
could sink US carriers from afar, fundamentally reordering the balance
of power in a region that has been dominated by the US since the end of
the Second World War.

A US Navy commander, Admiral Robert Willard, told Japan's Asahi Shimbun
newspaper this week that he believes the Chinese anti-ship missile, the
Dong Feng 21, has already achieved "initial operational capability",
although it would require years of testing.

Analysts remain divided over whether China is initiating an Asian arms
race. Even allowing for undeclared spending, China's annual defence
budget is still less than one-sixth of America's $663bn a year, or less
than half the US figure when expressed as a percentage of GDP.

However in a speech earlier this year Mr Gates warned that China's new
weapons, including its carrier-killing missile, "threaten America's
primary way to project power and help allies in the Pacific",
underscoring the difficulties that lie ahead as China and the US seek to
contain growing strategic frictions.

As China modernises, Mr Liang pledged that its armed forces would also
increasingly use homegrown Chinese technology, which analysts say still
lags behind Western technology even as China races to catch up.

"The modernisation of the Chinese military cannot depend on others, and
cannot be bought," Mr Liang added, "In the next five years, our economy
and society will develop faster, boosting comprehensive national power.
We will take the opportunity and speed up modernisation of the military."



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