Miami Herald (Sunday)

Crisis hotline with China? No one there will answer

- BY ELLEN KNICKMEYER Associated Press

WASHINGTON

Within hours of an Air Force F-22 downing a giant Chinese balloon that had crossed the United States, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin reached out to his Chinese counterpar­t via a special crisis line, aiming for a quick generalto-general talk that could explain things and ease tensions.

But Austin's effort last Saturday fell flat when Chinese De- fense Minister Wei Fenghe declined to get on the line, the Pentagon said.

China’s Defense Ministry said it refused the call from Austin after the balloon was shot down because the U.S. had “not created the proper atmosphere” for dialogue and exchange. The U.S. action had “seriously violated internatio­nal norms and set a pernicious precedent,” a ministry spokespers­on was quoted as saying in a statement Thursday.

It's been an experience that's frustrated U.S. commanders for decades when it comes to getting their Chinese counterpar­ts on a phone or video line as some flaring crisis is sending tensions between the nations climbing.

From Americans' perspectiv­e, the lack of the kind of reliable crisis communicat­ions that helped get the U.S. and Soviet Union through the Cold War without an armed nuclear exchange is raising the dangers of the U.S.-China relationsh­ip now, at a time when

China's military strength is growing and tensions with the U.S. are on the rise.

Without that ability for generals in opposing capitals to clear things up in a hurry, Americans worry that misunderst­andings, false reports or accidental collisions could cause a minor confrontat­ion to spiral into greater hostilitie­s.

And it's not about any technical shortfall with the communicat­ion equipment, said Bonnie Glaser, managing director of IndoPacifi­c studies at the German Marshall Fund think tank.

The issue is a fundamenta­l difference in the way China and the U.S. view the value and purpose of military-to-military hotlines.

U.S. military leaders’

Defense Sec. Lloyd Austin faith in Washington-toBeijing hotlines as a way to defuse flare-ups with China’s military has been butting up against a sharply different take — a Chinese political system that runs on slow deliberati­ve consultati­on by political leaders and makes no room for individual­ly directed, realtime talk between rival generals.

And Chinese leaders are suspicious of the whole U.S. notion of a hotline — seeing it as an American channel for trying to talk their way out of repercussi­ons for a U.S. provocatio­n.

“That's really dangerous,” Assistant Secretary for Defense Ely Ratner said Thursday of the difficulty of military-to-military crisis communicat­ions with China, when Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) pressed him about China's latest rebuff on the hotline setup with Beijing.

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