China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Taiwan reference protested

- By REUTERS and XINHUA

The Chinese Foreign Ministry has lodged “stern representa­tions” with the United States after US President Barack Obama signed into law a US defense policy bill that suggests a plan to conduct highlevel military exchanges with Taiwan.

Part of the $618.7 billion National Defense Authorizat­ion Act “expresses the sense of Congress that (the US Department of Defense) should conduct a program of senior military exchanges between the United States and Taiwan”.

In a statement on Sunday, the Foreign Ministry said it had lodged a protest with the United States over the Taiwan content of the act and expressed its strong opposition.

Taiwan is Chinese territory and purely an internal matter, the ministry said.

It noted that the part of the defense policy bill referring to Taiwan was not legally binding, but said it was an interferen­ce with China’s internal affairs that China could not accept.

“We urge the US side to abide by its promises made to China on the Taiwan issue, stop US-Taiwan military contacts and arms sales to Taiwan, to avoid damaging Sino-US ties and peace and stability in the Taiwan Straits.”

Obama signed the policy bill into law though he said he was disappoint­ed in many aspects, the White House announced on Friday.

The wide-ranging National Defense Authorizat­ion Act (NDAA), which was passed by both the House and the Senate with veto-proof majorities earlier this month, lays restrictio­ns on transferri­ng detainees out of the Guantanamo Bay facility in Cuba, ensuring that Obama will not be able to fulfill his goal of closing it before he leaves office.

It authorizes $618.7 billion in spending, including a troop pay raise of 2.1 percent, though Obama has requested only a 1.6 percent pay raise.

It also calls for $3.2 billion more in base defense funding than Obama had requested, plus an additional $5.8 billion in White House-requested war dollars.

As for the size of the Army and Marine Corps, the new bill authorizes 476,000 activeduty soldiers (16,000 more than requested) and 185,000 Marines (3,000 more than requested).

Obama said despite his disappoint­ments, he signed the bill because it “authorizes fiscal year 2017 appropriat­ions principall­y for the Department of Defense and for Department of Energy national security programs, provides vital benefits for military personnel and their families, and includes authoritie­s to facilitate ongoing operations around the globe”.

However, “Congress again failed to enact meaningful reforms to divest unneeded force structure, reduce wasteful overhead and modernize military healthcare,” Obama said.

On the campaign trail, US President-elect Donald Trump promised a massive military buildup, including boosting the Army to 540,000 activeduty soldiers, increasing the Navy to 350 warships and adding 1,200 Air Force fighter jets.

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