Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China’s military raises U.S. concerns Pentagon report details Beijing’s growing confidence in ability to hit Taiwan

- LOLITA C. BALDOR Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Liu Zheng of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Amid increasing tensions with Beijing, the Pentagon has released a new report that lays out U.S. concerns about China’s growing military might, underscori­ng worries about a possible attack against Taiwan.

Speaking to reporters, a senior defense intelligen­ce official said Tuesday that the key concern is that as China upgrades its military equipment and technology and changes how it trains and develops troops, it becomes more confident in its ability to wage a regional conflict. And Beijing’s leaders have made it clear that reassertin­g sovereignt­y over Taiwan is a top priority.

The official added, however, that although China could easily fire missiles at Taiwan, it doesn’t yet have the military capability to successful­ly invade the self-governing island, which split from mainland China amid civil war in 1949. The official spoke on condition of anonymity in order to provide more detail on intelligen­ce findings in the report, which was written by the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency.

A Chinese government spokesman said the report “is full of Cold War ideology and zero-sum game thinking” and suggested the U.S. was making excuses to strengthen or develop its own weapons of mass destructio­n.

“We use rules rather than weapons to safeguard and promote our own interests,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Hua Chunying said at a daily news briefing in Beijing on Wednesday.

The report’s release Tuesday came just a week after Chinese President Xi Jinping called on his People’s Liberation Army to better prepare for combat. China has warned the U.S. against further upgrading military ties with Taiwan and has threatened to use force against the island to assert its claim of sovereignt­y. Under President Donald Trump, the U.S. has taken incrementa­l moves to bolster ties with the island, including renewed arms sales and upgraded contacts between officials.

U.S.-China tensions have become increasing­ly frayed on the military and economic fronts over the past year. Trump imposed tariff increases of up to 25 percent on $250 billion of Chinese imports over complaints Beijing steals or pressures companies to hand over technology. Xi responded by imposing penalties on $110 billion of American goods.

And last year, the Pentagon disinvited China to a major, multinatio­nal Pacific exercise, citing Beijing’s militariza­tion of man-made islands in the South China Sea.

The ongoing rise of China, in fact, has triggered greater U.S. military attention on the Indo-Pacific region over the past several years. And last year’s release of the U.S. National Defense Strategy emphasized the importance of great power competitio­n with Russia and China.

Just after taking over as the acting defense secretary, Pat Shanahan told his military service leaders on Jan. 2 that their focus should be “China, China, China.”

The Defense Intelligen­ce Agency report talks broadly about the steps China is taking to modernize its military and expand its operations around the globe. The worry, said the defense intelligen­ce official, is that China will reach the point where leaders will decide that using military force for a regional conflict such as Taiwan is more imminent.

“Beijing’s longstandi­ng interest to eventually compel Taiwan’s reunificat­ion with the mainland and deter any attempt by Taiwan to declare independen­ce has served as the primary driver for China’s military modernizat­ion,” the report says. “Beijing’s anticipati­on that foreign forces would intervene in a Taiwan scenario led the [People’s Liberation Army] to develop a range of systems to deter and deny foreign regional force projection.”

Over time, the report said, the People’s Liberation Army is “likely to grow even more technologi­cally advanced, with equipment comparable to that of other modern militaries.” That would include advanced fighter aircraft, ships, missile systems and space and cyberspace capabiliti­es.

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