Dayton Daily News

U.S. defense chief slams China as rising threat to world order

- — ROBERT BURNS AND MATTHEW LEE, ASSOCIATED PRESS

MUNICH — U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper on Saturday cast China as a rising threat to world order — saying the world’s most populous nation steals Western know-how, intimidate­s smaller neighbors and seeks an “advantage by any means and at any cost.”

A frequent critic of China, Esper used an address to an internatio­nal security conference in Munich, Germany, to give his most comprehens­ive condemnati­on yet of a communist country that he said tops the Pentagon’s list of potential adversarie­s, followed by Russia,“rogue states” like North Korea and Iran, and continuing threats from extremist groups.

“The Chinese Communist Party is heading even faster and further in the wrong direction – more internal repression, more predatory economic practices, more heavy-handedness, and most concerning for me, a more aggressive military posture,” he said.

Esper stressed that the United States does not want conflicts with China, and noted that the U.S. government has provided medical supplies to help China combat a coronaviru­s outbreak that has infected over 67,000 people. Still, he said Beijing has made clear its long-term intentions and said Europe and the rest of the world must “wake up” to the threats that China poses. “The Communist Party and its associated organs, including the People’s Liberation Army, are increasing­ly operating in theaters outside its borders, including Europe, and seeking advantage by any means, and at any cost,”he said. “While we often doubt the transparen­cy and forthright­ness of Beijing, when it comes to their security aims, we should take the Chinese government at its word,”he said.“They have said that by 2035, the PRC intends to complete its military modernizat­ion, and, by 2049, it seeks to dominate Asia as the preeminent global military power.”

With words that echoed the Trump administra­tion’s criticisms of Iran, Esper said China represses its people and threatens its neighbors.

“We want China to behave like a normal country,” Esper said, adding “and that means the Chinese government needs to change its policies and behaviors.”

Esper and his immediate predecesso­r, Jim Mattis, have sought to shift the main focus of U.S. military and security policy toward China and away from small wars against insurgents and extremists. U.S. allies in Europe, while concerned about China’s rise, are more immediatel­y worried about Russia.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi later responded, telling the forum that Esper and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo “say the same thing wherever they go about China” and dismissed their remarks as “lies.”

“The root cause of all these problems and issues is that the U.S. does not want to see the rapid developmen­t and rejuvenati­on of China, and still less would they want to accept the success of a socialist country,”Wang said through a translator.

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