The Timaru Herald

Nato: China raising the stakes

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China is ‘‘changing the nature of warfare’’ by investing heavily in modern military capabiliti­es such as robots, facial recognitio­n software and artificial intelligen­ce, the head of Nato has warned.

Jens Stoltenber­g, the secretary-general, said China’s military build-up and coercive behaviour presented security risks to the Western alliance.

In a press conference following the Nato summit yesterday in Brussels, he said the alliance must spend more to beef up its defences and counter threats from Beijing and Russia. He also described relations with Russia as at their lowest point since the end of the Cold War.

The meeting came as it emerged that Porton Down, Britain’s top-secret research laboratory, was hiring hundreds of scientists, including specialist­s in space and artificial intelligen­ce, to counter threats from China and Russia. Over the next three months jobs will be advertised for about 300 defence scientists to work for Porton Down, also known as the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, at its site near Salisbury and other locations across the country after it received extra funding.

The recruitmen­t drive, the biggest in the laboratory’s 20-year history, is part of the government’s efforts to make Britain a ‘‘science and tech superpower’’ by 2030, with the ability to ‘‘monitor, protect and defend’’ the country’s interests. Scientists specialisi­ng in artificial intelligen­ce and space are among those being sought, as well as analysts and engineers. More positions are expected to be advertised next year.

During the Nato summit in Brussels, the allies focused on the threats coming from China and Russia, as well as the withdrawal of Nato troops from Afghanista­n. They agreed that China’s behaviour was a ‘‘systemic challenge’’ to the rules-based internatio­nal order.

Stoltenber­g said that China was ‘‘coming closer’’ to the alliance and would soon be the biggest economy in the world and would have the second-biggest defence budget. He said that it was investing in nuclear warheads and new disruptive technologi­es, such as artificial intelligen­ce, and then putting that software in weapons systems to make them more deadly.

‘‘They are really in the process of changing the nature of warfare,’’ he said in a press conference after the summit.

In a sign of tension President Emmanuel Macron of France appeared to clash with President Joe Biden of the US and Stoltenber­g over the language on China. At a separate press conference Macron said: ‘‘Nato is a North Atlantic organisati­on, China has nothing to do with the North Atlantic. We shouldn’t bias our relationsh­ip with China – it is much larger than just military. We shouldn’t distract from the many challenges we have within Nato.’’

Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, stressed the need for the ‘‘right balance’’ when it came to Beijing.

Nato countries also agreed to defend each other if war broke out in space following Chinese and Russian tests of anti-satellite weaponry. Stoltenber­g said that any attack on satellites or other space assets could trigger Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty, invoking a collective military response. – The Times

‘‘They (China) are really in the process of changing the nature of warfare,’’ Jens Stoltenber­g

Nato secretary-general

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