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Chinese Military,Political and Social Superthread

It worked.

Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from today’s Globe and Mail, is a report on the successful conclusion of the Shenzhou VII mission:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080928.wchinaspace0928/BNStory/Science/home
China's spacewalk astronauts return as heroes

EMMA GRAHAM-HARRISON
Reuters

September 28, 2008 at 8:58 AM EDT

BEIJING — Three Chinese astronauts landed safely back on earth on Sunday after a 68-hour voyage and space walk that showcased the country's technological mastery and were hailed as a major victory by its leaders.

Their Shenzhou ("sacred vessel") spacecraft parachuted down to the steppes of northern Inner Mongolia region at dusk. Doctors rushed to open the capsule and check the men as they readjusted to gravity and recovered from the punishing re-entry.

Spacewalker Zhai Zhigang was the first to emerge and was helped to a nearby folding chair, where he was greeted with flowers and applause and said he was "proud of his motherland".

Premier Wen Jiabao told the nation minutes later that the three were heroes for their efforts, which put China in an elite club of three nations that have managed a space walk.

"The complete success of the manned Shenzhou VII is a great stride forward for China's space technology," he said, adding that the country's efforts were focused only on science.

"Chinese people have ceaselessly sought the peaceful development and use of space technology," he said. China's rapidly advancing program has raised disquiet among Western governments and in Japan that it may have military ambitions in space, especially after conducting an anti-satellite missile test last year.

Mr. Zhai's brief but historic outing in a Chinese-designed space suit that cost $4.4-million capped a year in which the country has both coped with the tragedy of the devastating Sichuan earthquake and revelled in the Beijing Olympics.

The ability to conduct a space walk is key to a longer-term goal of assembling a space lab and then a larger space station, and maybe one day making a landing on the moon.

The feat has also provided the government with a welcome diversion from a scandal about toxic milk that has poisoned thousands of infants and killed four, inciting anger at home and tainting the "made in China" brand abroad.

From cosmopolitan Beijing and Shanghai to tiny rural hamlets, the astronauts' exploits have been followed on television by a mesmerized population, with millions glued to live broadcasts of the takeoff, space walk and landing.

The trio can expect an adoring welcome from the whole country when they are allowed out of quarantine, which the official Xinhua agency said would last around half a month.

Previous space pioneers, now national icons, have been showered with tributes and gifts ranging from luxury housing to traditional operas performed in their honour.

The fast-growing Asian power wants to be sure of a say in the future use of space and its resources, and has come a long way since late leader Mao Zedong lamented that China could not even launch a potato into space.

China's first manned spaceflight was in 2003, followed by a two-man flight in 2005. The only other countries that have sent people into space are Russia and the United States.

The mission is also a great success for the Chinese Communist Party, which next year celebrates the 60th anniversary of its ascent to power, and Premier Wen's speech was peppered with jargon that emphasized its role in the space program.

One revealing thing about this mission is that the TV coverage of the mission was live for most Chinese. This indicates a high level of official confidence in the technical aspects of the programme.


 
Because it was already filmed maybe?  ;D

On liftoff there were congratulations and kodos to all, but they boobooed.......it was posted hours before the liftoff.... ;D
 
Hitchens has a pretty bleak assesment of China's involvement in Africa. The article is too long to paste. One point he makes is the failure of the European colonists in Africa and he wonders if the slave state approach might be more pragmatic. Somehow I dont see Africans putting up with their Chinese overlords,but I might be wrong.He who has guns rules.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1063198/PETER-HITCHENS-How-China-created-new-slave-empire-Africa.html
 
E.R. Campbell said:
I’m a bit perplexed.

I’ve said, often enough to be tiresome I think, that:

• China and Russia are enemies – not just ‘not friends,’ they are real enemies and there are good and valid reasons for the enmity;

• China organized the SCO and invited Russia in partly to rub Russia’s nose in China’s assertion of its power and influence in the ‘Stans’; and

• China has consistently and rigorously defended the principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of sovereign  states.

Given all that, I still thought China would find a way to offer Russia a wee bit of support, some sort of diplomatic fig leaf. The aim, I thought, would be to keep the crisis boiling – to the long term detriment of both Russia and the West. Instead China led the other four SCO members in a condemnation of Russia.

Another thing to remember about the Chinese is that they ‘play the long game’ – they generally eschew short term gains.

For the last five years or so the Chinese have been, fairly consistently, thumbing their noses at the West and ‘playing nice’ with Russia. All of a sudden they turn their backs on Russia and give explicit support to George W Bush, John McCain and the NATO hardliners (a minority, to be sure, but an important one). I wonder: Why?

What makes it more valuable, in the long term, for China to dump Russia, suddenly, and ‘make nice’ with the West? What am I missing?


Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from today’s Globe and Mail, is an article that addresses some of my questions:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080926.wcochina29/BNStory/specialComment/home
The marriage of convenience is over
In the wake of the invasion of Georgia, China is seriously rethinking its relations with Russia

DIMITRY SHLAPENTOKH

From Monday's Globe and Mail
September 28, 2008 at 11:24 PM EDT

Second honeymoons rarely, if ever, recapture the zest of lost love. Yet ever since the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991, Russia and China have sought to rekindle the close relations that once, supposedly, existed between the USSR and Mao's China. But this renewed Sino-Russian marriage always smacked more of convenience - aimed as it was at checking U.S. hegemony - than of true romance. And, with Russia's recent invasion of Georgia, even the illusion of attraction has now been shattered.

During Vladimir Putin's presidency, Chinese and Russian troops engaged in joint military manoeuvres, and the two countries became dominant powers in the Shanghai Co-operation Organization, which, to some Western observers, looked like an effort to counterbalance the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. There were also years of “Russia in China” and “China in Russia” cultural exchanges, meant to underscore that the two countries were tied together not just by geopolitical pragmatism, but by genuine cultural and historical ties.

But the fact is that 17 years of high-level bilateral co-operation have produced little of substance. Indeed, in the wake of the invasion of Georgia, China may be seriously rethinking its relations with Russia. It may not yet be ready to embark on a full-fledged policy of “containment,” but after the dismemberment of Georgia - and with Russia claiming a zone of “privileged influence” throughout the former Soviet world - China clearly views Russia as an emerging strategic threat.

For example, China has refused to endorse Russia's recognition of the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and has encouraged the SCO's other members to do the same. The reasons are not hard to find. As a general principle of foreign policy, China believes national borders are sacrosanct. No power, not even the United Nations, should be allowed to change them without the consent of the country concerned.

More importantly, China views the breakup of the USSR as one of the greatest strategic gifts in its history. Instead of confronting a (usually hostile) Russian/Soviet empire on its border, a vast swath of buffer states appeared after 1991. Their continued independence is now deemed essential to China's national security. As a result, any more Russian efforts to establish even informal suzerainty over the Soviet successor states are, following the dismemberment of Georgia, likely to meet Chinese resistance.

The economic components of the Sino-Russian relationship - where real attachments are tested - are also dissatisfactory, at least from China's point of view. China's major interest in Russia is oil and gas. But, while Russia is firmly committed to being a major supplier of gas and oil to Europe, it is hesitant to play a similar role with China. Moreover, Russia's efforts to gain monopoly control of the gas pipeline networks across Eurasia pose a direct danger for China, because monopolists can not only gouge their consumers, but also shut off supplies for political purposes, as Russia has done repeatedly over the past two decades. So China's national security interest is to ensure that the gas-supplying nations of Central Asia have outlets to sell their gas that are not under Kremlin control.

Other than oil, gas and other commodities, China has rather limited interests in Russia. Russia has been China's major supplier of weapons since the late 1990s. But, given the stagnant state of Russian science and technology, even the best Russian equipment now seems out of date. Indeed, although the war with Georgia demonstrated the revived combat spirit of the Russian army - at least when compared to its ineptness in the two Chechen wars of the 1990s - it also exhibited the grave defects of Russian military technology. Most of the arms used were yesterday's weapons. As China is now able to harness its own technological might to produce sophisticated weapons, Russia's usefulness in this area is waning fast.

Nor do the Chinese have much interest in assuming de facto control of Asiatic Russia, despite shrieks from Russian strategic pundits that this is China's real goal. China might, indeed, have an interest in some border areas with fertile soil and moderate climate. But it hardly wishes to colonize the frozen wastes of Siberia. In fact, Siberia is not much different from China's own almost empty mountain/desert borderlands, where even agriculture is a daunting task. As for Russia's Far East, the Chinese believe it will eventually fall to China anyway, so there is no need to hasten the process.

China is far more interested in focusing on the United States, its major trade partner and rival, and on South Asia and Iran, which supplies much of China's oil and regards it as a more reliable ally than Russia. Thus, the recently signed agreement settling China's ongoing border dispute with Russia was not aimed so much at building a geopolitical marriage as securing each other's rear, offering both sides a free hand to explore opportunities elsewhere.

What China wants and what it gets may be different things. With its long borders with Russia, China knows it would have much to regret if a new, oil-fired Russian empire appeared on its doorstep.

Dimitry Shlapentokh is associate professor of history at Indiana University, South Bend.


I think the Iranian oil ‘connection’ is very important to Sino-American relations. It is not just a ‘pipe dream’ and China’s friend (client?) Pakistan, which is ‘central’ to the scheme was interested as late as the Spring and so, just a year ago, were the Iranians. While some Asians may believe that ”Israeli pre-emption [is] better than [an]Islamist cure” for the Middle East, I think China will see any attack on Iran as a very unfriendly, dangerously provocative and American directed act.

 
The Chinese dont care who they get their oil from. They are buying Iraqi crude because the  democrat  Congress wont allow the US to buy it. >:(
 
tomahawk6 said:
The Chinese dont care who they get their oil from. They are buying Iraqi crude because the  democrat  Congress wont allow the US to buy it. >:(

Quite correct. In that they are just like (almost) everyone else. Most countries, the US excepted, don't care where their oil comes from.

But most countries,including China, want a secure supply - and China would rather not rely upon tankers for its supply; it would rather have oil from a friend that flows through pipelines that run through friendly, ideally client, states.

 
E.R. Campbell said:
Quite correct. In that they are just like (almost) everyone else. Most countries, the US excepted, don't care where their oil comes from.

But most countries,including China, want a secure supply - and China would rather not rely upon tankers for its supply; it would rather have oil from a friend that flows through pipelines that run through friendly, ideally client, states.

You know I just realized that the South China Sea/Zhong Nan Hai claim by Beijing up may just be based on the need to secure the passage of these tankers to the mainland after all rather than any real sense of "Han" entitlement/right to these waters reminiscent of the Ming Dynasty reach up to the area through their expeditions.


 
Actually the tankers have to go through the Indian Ocean and into the Strait of Malacca.Thats the choke point for tankers bound for China and thats the mission of the Indian Navy.
 
tomahawk6 said:
Actually the tankers have to go through the Indian Ocean and into the Strait of Malacca.Thats the choke point for tankers bound for China and thats the mission of the Indian Navy.

Well the Southeastern end of the Malacca Strait enters the South China Sea near Singapore. Of course it is a chokepoint that is also pirate-infested and thus the sealanes there are the responsibility for a number of navies in the region. Still, Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia would be still in a better position than India or the US to take advantage of this chokepoint by blockading it -specifically China-bound sea-commerce- if the need ever arises, because of these 3 nations' proximity to where the Strait meets the South China Sea. Also, it was a good move for the US to make an agreement with Singapore to allow the USN to periodically dock their ships at Seletar Naval base, IIRC.
 
The USN's long suit is the carrier battle group, so they have the ability to shut down the Malacca Strait from the positions in the Indian or Pacific Oceans. (This could also be done with attack submarines, or other combinations of systems). Their physical presence is not entirely necessary (and they could also grit their teeth and watch the USAF shut down the Malacca Strait using airpower; B-52's could mine the strait and launch anti ship missiles at targets).

The Indian Navy might not have the same strength and reach as the USN, but they also have a potent combination of submarines, surface forces and limited carrier aviation to control the western approaches, and the Japanese Navy is a very sophisticated and world class force which could establish control over the eastern approaches. Even the RAN can project power into the region, although not with the same weight as the other navies.

Since war planners have to go by capabilities, not intentions, the tanker route through the Malacca Strait probably keeps lots of people up at night....
 
I have not seen anything where these companies pick up protection teams prior to transiting through the Malacca Strait  and the Somalia stretch, then drop them off at a collection point once they are safely past....

This concept has to be a whole lot cheaper than paying ransoms, losing cargo and ships, and paying exorbitant insurance rates as more and more ships are attacked....

In fact I am surprised that entrepreneur hasn't done it already.....
 
The law of unintended consequences strikes again:

http://china-e-lobby.blogspot.com/2008/10/even-wall-street-panic-means-bad-news.html

Even the Wall Street panic means bad news for Communist China

I'm sure there are many, many cadres in Beijing who are deeply grateful that the Wall Street panic has dominated the news for so long.

Whatever one thinks of the panic (either as a localized problem in the financial sector or a prelude to a global economic meltdown), it has done what the Korean colony's nuclear antics (CNN and One Free Korea) could not do - distract attention from the melamine fiasco (Epoch Times), to say nothing of more recent reports of fraud (Epoch Times) and repression (World Net Daily).

The initial Congressional refusal to approve the Wall Street bailout meant even more time when these pesky problems would stay away from the spotlight, but it also meant that Congress would remain in session past its expected adjournment. That could mean a welcome surprise for anti-Communists everywhere: approval of the U.S.-India nuclear deal (Washington Times):

    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Nevada Democrat, said Tuesday he was close to
    an agreement to let debate proceed on the controversial pact, which U.S. officials see as the centerpiece of new strategic alliance with one of the world's emerging economic and military powerhouses.

    "I'm quite sure that we can finalize [an agreement] so that there can be a vote on that tomorrow," said Mr. Reid.

    Over the objections of opponents who said the pact would undercut global efforts to restrain nuclear proliferation, the House passed the India agreement in a 298-117 vote Saturday. But it was not clear that the Senate would have time to act until lawmakers were kept in session to deal with the Wall Street credit crisis.


In other words, the Wall Street shenanigans will give Congress enough time to cement the emerging U.S.-India alliance.

The further context of this is equally damning for Beijing: increasing concern within the American military about the buildup of the so-called People's Liberation Army (Forbes, Washington Times, and Yomiuri Shimbun), further exposure of the Long Arm of Lawlessness (Epoch Times), the nomination of Hu Jia for the Nobel Peace Prize (Epoch Times), and the continuing focus on Tibet (Epoch Times and more Epoch Times).

At the very least, the Wall Street brouhaha was supposed to make the United States look bad, make the cadres look good by comparison, and as I said earlier, distract attention from a host of troubles. It was not supposed to accidentally allow Washington and New Delhi to move closer together.

Yet that appears to be exactly what it will do. I guess Bismarck's adage will be proven true once more!


  Talk about unintended consequences
    I'm sure the folks in Beijing are having a lot of fun watching us work through the Wall Street panic - tut-tutting at the markets, hooting at the Congressional vote Monday (I was happy with the vote, too, but for very different reasons) ...
    Posted by D.J. McGuire at 10:49 AM

 
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5ic8Xn_aWRe5NctNY-Kg8nLaj-EmwD93J95V00

US announces Taiwan arms package

By FOSTER KLUG – 1 hour ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Bush administration announced plans Friday to sell up to $6.5 billion in arms to Taiwan, a decision sure to anger Taiwan's rival China and one that could complicate stalled North Korean disarmament efforts.

The announcement of the package, which includes Apache helicopters and Patriot III missiles, came in a notification to Congress posted on the Defense Security Cooperation Agency Web site. The State Department said lawmakers, who were expected to leave Washington on Friday to campaign for November elections, have 30 days to comment on the proposed sale. Without objections, the deal would proceed.

The arms package enjoys support among senior lawmakers, who were briefed on the deal by administration officials. China, however, vehemently opposes the provision of weapons to Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its territory and has threatened to invade should the self-governing island ever formalize its de facto independence.

U.S. arms sales to Taiwan are a sensitive matter because any dispute between China and Taiwan could ensnare the United States, Taiwan's most important ally and largest arms supplier.

The United States and China are part of troubled six-nation negotiations to persuade North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons. A successful result to the stalled talks is an important foreign policy goal of the Bush administration in its remaining months in office. China, which hosts the talks, is seen as having economic and political leverage with the North.

The State Department said in a statement that the arms package, which also includes Harpoon missiles, Javelin missiles, upgrades for Taiwan's E-2T aircraft and spare parts for Taiwan's air force, is "a significant and tangible demonstration of the commitment of this administration to provide Taiwan the defensive arms its needs to be strong."

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, the senior Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said judicious arms sales constitute "an essential element of United States support for a secure, stable and democratic Taiwan, as well as peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait. Now is not the time to backtrack from that historic and bipartisan policy."

This year's U.S. Defense Department report on China's military said Beijing continues its huge military buildup opposite Taiwan, further pushing the balance of power between the two rivals toward the mainland's favor.

Taiwan relies on U.S. weapons to keep pace with China. Washington shifted its recognition as China's official government from Taipei to Beijing in 1979, but it remains committed to Taiwan's defense and has hinted it could come to the island's aid if China should attack.

U.S. caution about selling arms to Taiwan reflects China's growing economic and political clout. The Bush administration needs China's help in a host of international efforts, including attempts to confront Iranian and North Korean nuclear programs.

Among the principal contractors for the Apache sales are Boeing Co., General Electric Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp. For the Patriot missiles, the principal contractors are Raytheon Co. and Lockheed Martin.

(WASHINGTON, October 3, 2008)
DSCA notified Congress of a possible Foreign Military Sale to Taiwan of the upgrade of four E-2T Aircraft to the HAWKEYE 2000 configuration
http://www.dsca.mil/PressReleases/36...iwan_08-47.pdf

(WASHINGTON, October 3, 2008)
DSCA notified Congress of a possible Foreign Military Sale to Taiwan of 30 AH-64D Block III APACHE Longbow Attack Helicopters
http://www.dsca.mil/PressReleases/36...iwan_08-41.pdf

(WASHINGTON, October 3, 2008)
DSCA notified Congress of a possible Foreign Military Sale to Taiwan of 330 PATRIOT Advanced Capability (PAC-3) missiles
http://www.dsca.mil/PressReleases/36...iwan_08-56.pdf

(WASHINGTON, October 3, 2008)
DSCA notified Congress of a possible Foreign Military Sale to Taiwan of 32 UGM-84L Sub-Launched HARPOON Block II missiles and 2 UTM-84L HARPOON Block II Exercise missiles
http://www.dsca.mil/PressReleases/36...iwan_08-46.pdf

(WASHINGTON, October 3, 2008)
DSCA notified Congress of a possible Foreign Military Sale to Taiwan which provides funds for the establishment of a blanket order requisition case for follow-on spare parts in support of F-5E/F, C-130H, F-16A/B, and Indigenous Defense Fighter IDF aircraft, communication equipment, radar, and other related elements of logistics support
http://www.dsca.mil/PressReleases/36...iwan_08-57.pdf

(WASHINGTON, October 3, 2008)
DSCA notified Congress today of a possible Foreign Military Sale to Taiwan of 182 JAVELIN guided missile rounds and 20 JAVELIN command launch units
http://www.dsca.mil/PressReleases/36...iwan_08-70.pdf
 
The Great Firewall of China disgorges some more secrets:

http://www.technologyreview.com/printer_friendly_article.aspx?id=21468&channel=communications&section=

China's Eye on Web Chatter
Poorly protected files reveal a massive surveillance scheme.
By Erica Naone

That Chinese Internet companies censor communications is well known, but a new report from a Canadian computer scientist reveals a new front in their efforts to monitor users online. The study shows that users of TOM-Skype, a Chinese voice and chat service that is compatible with the popular Internet phone system Skype, have been subject to extensive surveillance. To make matters worse, the records of their chat conversations, as well as detailed personal information, were stored insecurely on the Web.

Skype has previously acknowledged that its Chinese partner, TOM Online, blocks chat messages containing certain politically sensitive keywords. The new findings, however, reveal a level of surveillance that goes far beyond this.

Nart Villeneuve, a research fellow at the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto's Munk Centre for International Studies, uncovered the surveillance scheme by examining the behavior of the TOM-Skype client application. He used an application called Wireshark, which analyzes traffic sent over a computer network, to see what happens when different words are sent via chat using the software. Villeneuve discovered that an encrypted message was automatically sent by the client over the Internet when some words were entered. Following this encrypted packet across the Net, Villeneuve uncovered a directory of files on an open Web server. Not only was the directory publicly accessible, but the data within it could be unlocked using a password found in the same folder. Within these files were more than a million chat messages dating from August and September 2008.

Villeneuve used machine translation to convert the files he found from Chinese into English, and he analyzed the contents to determine likely trigger words. The list he came up with includes obscenities and politically sensitive words and phrases such as "Falun Gong," "democracy," and "Tibet." But Villeneuve also found evidence that completely innocuous messages--one, for example, contained nothing more than a smiley face--were logged. This suggests that certain users were targeted for monitoring, he says.

Villeneuve's report, which was issued jointly by the two university-affiliated digital censorship groups, the Open Net Initiative and Information Warfare Monitor, reveals that some records even contained sensitive personal information, including passwords, phone numbers, and bank-card details. Villeneuve also found a file from August 2007 that contained usernames and IP addresses of people who made voice calls through the network, as well as the date and time of these call and the recipients' telephone number. Since the report was released, Villeneuve says, the Web server directory has been secured, and the latest version of the TOM-Skype client does not seem to exhibit the same logging behavior.

On Thursday, Skype president Josh Silverman said in a statement that, while the keyword filtering is standard procedure for communications businesses operating in China, his company was not aware of the logging. "It was our understanding that it was not TOM's protocol to upload and store chat messages with certain keywords, and we are now inquiring with TOM to find out why the protocol changed," he said.

U.S. Internet companies have come under fire for cooperating with the Chinese authorities in the past. In 2005, Yahoo was roundly criticized for handing over information that led to the arrest and imprisonment of a Chinese journalist. Villeneuve says that the discovery serves as a further wake-up call for foreign dissidents. "In a lot of cases, especially if you look at the Yahoo e-mail cases in the past, people really put their trust into these foreign brands that have privacy policies and talk about end-to-end encryption," he says.

"The real issue here is that if you're an American company and you value your public image, you should be very careful about who your partners are in foreign countries," says Ross Anderson, a professor of security engineering at the University of Cambridge, U.K. "It used to be the case that surveillance was done more or less on a per-country basis," he adds. "But more and more, the censorship may be on a per-company basis."

Jedidiah Crandall, an assistant professor of computer science at the University of New Mexico, who has studied keyword filtering by the Chinese government, says that the filtering discovered by Villeneuve is much more aggressive than the filtering applied to web pages. "For any given keyword and any given application," he says, "the censors have different goals that they're trying to achieve."

Anderson says users concerned about their privacy should be aware that companies often cooperate with governments. In the case of companies with enormous market share, he says, those governments that get access to their data could unlock huge amounts of intelligence and personal information.

Copyright Technology Review 2008.
 
Taiwan's momenteous 10-10 or "Double 10" celebration which is to celebrate the anniversary of the 1911 Revolution against the Qing Dynasty and the subsequent forming of the Republic of China is approaching. They usually hold a large parade and with a lot of pomp and ceremony that rivals their PRC cousins' Tiananmen Square parades on the mainland in the display of their military hardware, although last year's parade was the first time since 1991 that they held one.  The celebration is a carryover from the time when the ROC/Guomindang government was still based in Nanjing and Chungking and Nanjing again before they moved to Taipei at the end of the 1949 Chinese Civil War.

Here are some pictures from the parade of last year reposted from another forum:

(Comments and translations are mine)

117shv4.jpg

ROCMC AAVs
fl91c1.jpg


ldrps.jpg


9jjgh0.jpg

-- Soldiers from Taiwan's special operation units

2cfb5si.jpg

-- Taiwanese Navy S.E.A.L. teams- in Chinese they are called Te Zhong Bu Dui or just "Zhong Dui" in common parlance.

2nqhcmc.jpg

-- A home-grown Tien Kung 3 ship-to-ship missile


14c7675.jpg

-- Taiwan's indigenous Hsiung Feng III missile

m5zfb.jpg

-- AT-3 attack trainer jets

110vi34.jpg

-- Taiwan's US-made Patriot surface to air missile batteries

jhg6mr.jpg

-- Taiwanese military TOW anti-tank missile vehicles

2e2l2cn.jpg

Avenger missile batteries on Humvees.

 
http://www.thestar.com/News/World/article/512931

China furious with U.S., cancels military meetings

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON–China has abruptly canceled a series of military and diplomatic contacts with the United States to protest a planned $6.5 billion package of U.S. arms to Taiwan, American officials told The Associated Press today.
Beijing has notified the U.S. that it will not go forward with several senior level visits and other cooperative military-to-military plans because of the sale, which was announced last week, Pentagon and State Department officials said.

"In response to Friday's announcement of Taiwan arms sales, the People's Republic of China canceled or postponed several upcoming military-to-military exchanges," said Marine Corps Maj. Stewart Upton, a Defense Department spokesperson, lamenting that "China's continued politicization of our military relationship results in missed opportunities."
The Chinese action will not stop the country's participation with the United States in international efforts over Iran's and North Korea's nuclear programs, U.S. officials said.

But it does include the cancellation of an upcoming U.S. visit by a senior Chinese general, other similar visits, port calls by naval vessels and the indefinite postponement of meetings on stopping the spread of weapons of mass destruction, the officials said.
China will also not participate in an exchange with the United States on humanitarian assistance and disaster relief that was to take place before the end of November, they said.
"It's an unfortunate step," said deputy State Department spokesperson Robert Wood.

Beijing is furious with the U.S. decision to sell Taiwan the huge package of advanced weaponry, including 182 Javelin guided missile rounds and 20 launch units, 32 Harpoon missiles, 330 Patriot missiles and 30 Apache attack helicopters. China, which regards Taiwan as a renegade province, says the sale interferes with internal Chinese affairs and harms its national security.

"The Chinese government and the Chinese people strongly oppose and object to the U.S. government's actions, which harm Chinese interests and Sino-U.S. relations," its foreign ministry said in a statement Saturday, adding that U.S. diplomats had been summoned to hear a strong protest.
China's Ambassador to the United States, Zhou Wenzhong, registered a similar protest at the State Department on Monday. A Chinese Embassy spokesman in Washington said it would be "only natural" for the ambassador to lodge a protest.

Upton stressed that the sale does not represent a change in U.S. policy and that Washington is only upholding the provisions of the Taiwan Relations Act under which the U.S. makes available items necessary for Taiwan to maintain a sufficient self-defense.
Taiwan relies on U.S. weapons to keep pace with China's massive arms buildup across the Taiwan Strait. U.S. arms sales to Taiwan are a crucial matter because any dispute between China and Taiwan could ensnare the United States.

Washington is Taiwan's most important ally and largest arms supplier.
The Defense Security Cooperation Agency on Friday notified Congress of the plan to sell up to $6.5 billion in advanced weaponry and military items to Taiwan. Under procedures for such foreign military sales, the deal would proceed if lawmakers do not voice objections within 30 days of the notification.

Beijing claims Taiwan as its own territory and has threatened to invade should the self-governing island ever formalize its de facto independence.

 
Maybe it's time this was merged with the China superthread? Too many overlaps in topics.
 
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