The Phnom Penh Post

China hits out at US report on expansion

- Yanan Wang

BEIJING yesterday dismissed as “irresponsi­ble” an annual US Defense Department report that predicted China would expand its global military presence, building overseas bases in countries like Pakistan.

Published on Tuesday, the Pentagon report estimated that China spent $180 billion last year on its military – the world’s largest – a figure well over the country’s official $140 billion defence budget.

“China most likely will seek to establish additional military bases in countries with which it has a longstandi­ng friendly relationsh­ip and similar strategic interests, such as Pakistan, and in which there is a precedent for hosting foreign militaries,” the report said.

China’s Defence Ministry refuted this assessment yesterday. “China is not doing any military expansion and does not seek a sphere of influence,” it said in a statement.

Foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying likewise said that China “is firmly opposed” to aspects of the publicatio­n.

“We have noted the report released by the US which made irresponsi­ble remarks about China’s national defence developmen­t in disregard of the facts,” Hua said, declining to comment on “speculatio­n” and noting that the “friendly cooperatio­n [between China and Pakistan] does not target any third party”.

As part of China’s expansive Belt and Road regional infrastruc­ture project, China and Pakistan are building an economic corridor aimed at linking northwest China to the Arabian Sea. India has voiced displeasur­e at the planned route, which cuts through Gilgit and Baltistan in Pakistan-administer­ed Kashmir – disputed territory which India claims is illegally occupied.

China started building its first overseas military base in February 2016 in the small nation of Djibouti, where it will be stationed just a few miles from a US camp. The outpost will support the country’s UN peacekeepe­rs in Africa, allow it to evacuate its nationals in a crisis and support anti-piracy activities off Somalia, according to China.

The Pentagon report noted that the strategica­lly-sited camp, “along with regular naval vessel visits to foreign ports, both reflects and amplifies China’s growing influence, extending the reach of its armed forces”.

James Char, a China analyst at Singapore’s Nanyang Technologi­cal University, said that “it would not be surprising if the People’s Liberation Army is working with its overseas counterpar­ts on reaching formal agreements on basing arrangemen­ts”.

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