Business World

China amps up defense spending amid modernizat­ion drive

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BEIJING — China announced on Monday an 8.1% defense budget increase for 2018, giving a boost to the modernizat­ion of the world’s largest military after spending slowed in the previous two years.

Beijing will splash out 1.11 trillion yuan ($175 billion) on its military, according to a budget report presented before the opening session of the annual National People’s Congress.

“We will stick to the Chinese path in strengthen­ing our armed forces, advance all aspects of military training and war preparedne­ss, and firmly and resolvedly safeguard national sovereignt­y, security, and developmen­t interests,” Premier Li Keqiang said in a report to the legislatur­e.

China’s neighbors and the US have watched warily as Beijing has modernized its military, reducing its ground troops while spending on state- of- the- art hardware and weapons.

Mr. Li said the military had completed its goal of slashing troop numbers by 300,000, leaving the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) with a two-million-strong force.

At the same time, Beijing has imposed increasing­ly assertive claims to vast expanses of the contested South China Sea, while engaging in confrontat­ions with Japan over disputed islands in the East China Sea and with India over Himalayan border regions.

The 2018 outlay compares with a 7% increase last year and 7.6% in 2016, which marked the first time in six years that spending growth was not in double figures.

China spent $151 billion on the PLA last year, the second-largest defense budget in the world but still four times less than the $603billion US outlay, according to the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies, a London- based think tank.

The defense budget increase has roughly kept pace with China’s national economic output in recent years. The economy grew by 6.9% in 2017 and the government said Monday it will target growth of around 6.5% in 2018.

“We can expect that China’s defense budget will continue to be subordinat­ed to, and coordinate­d with, China’s economic performanc­e. It will likely not be over-militarize­d,” said James Char, a military expert at Singapore’s Nanyang Technologi­cal University.

‘WORLD-CLASS’ ARMY

As the PLA marked its 90th anniversar­y in August, Mr. Xi warned that China will protect its sovereignt­y against “any people, organizati­on or political party.”

Since coming to power in 2012, the president has trumpeted the need to build a stronger combatread­y military, while cementing his leadership over the army, which was ordered to pledge absolute loyalty to him last year.

At a major Communist Party congress in October, Mr. Xi vowed to build a “world-class” fighting force by 2050.

The PLA has stocked up on stealth fighter jets, warships and high- tech weaponry over the years.

“Technologi­cally speaking, the PLA has progressed markedly in recent years, with its own research and developmen­t in military hardware and growing profession­alism reducing the gap with its US counterpar­t,” Mr. Char said.

Last year, China unveiled its first domestical­ly built aircraft carrier, which will carry J- 15 fighters that will take off from a raised “ski jump” platform. It also launched a new class of destroyer.

Its military has one operationa­l carrier — the Liaoning —a Soviet- era vessel bought from Ukraine that was refitted and commission­ed in 2012.

The chairman of the Dalian Shipbuildi­ng Industry, which worked on both ships, said the company was “ready to build larger” carriers after gaining the experience to make more, the state-run China Daily newspaper said Friday.

China has also opened its first overseas military base in the Horn of Africa country of Djibouti.

Since 2008, its navy has participat­ed in anti-piracy operations off the coast of Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden.

Closer to home, China has in recent years built artificial islands — some with airstrips — capable of hosting military installati­ons in the South China Sea, inflaming tensions with its Southeast Asian neighbors.

US warships, meanwhile, regularly conduct “freedom of navigation” operations near the islands to challenge China’s territoria­l claims.

Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Vietnam and Taiwan have contested China’s claims to the sea.

China’s military budget is “disproport­ional in the sense that the economies of Southeast Asia do not have the resources to keep pace” and Japan’s constituti­on restricts military spending, said Matthew Funaiole, a fellow with the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies (CSIS) in Washington.

“Whether or not this is a ‘ threat’ depends on how China utilizes its capabiliti­es. That said, its maritime presence is certainly growing.” —

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