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China Holds Firm On Space Test As US Reviews Options

Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu.

China insists its military rise poses no threat: report
Beijing (AFP) Feb 2 - China's military development is no threat to other nations and it will never join an arms race, a top-ranking Chinese army official said in an interview published Friday. The comments by Zhang Qinsheng, deputy chief of the general staff of the Chinese army, appear to address international concerns about China's military ambitions after it carried out an anti-satellite weapon test last month.

"The People's Liberation Army is actively pushing forward its modernisation process... however, the PLA shall never engage in an arms race, nor threaten any country," Lieutenant-General Zhang told China Daily. "We do not conceal our intention to build a strong and modern national defence. We also tell the world candidly that the Chinese defence policy is always defensive in nature."

He emphasised Beijing's long-held position that modernisation of its armed forces is aimed at defending national sovereignty, security and reunification -- a reference to Taiwan, which China insists is part of its territory. The two sides split amid civil wars in 1949 and China has repeatedly threatened to invade Taiwan should the island declare formal independence.

Last month's test, when a ballistic missile shot down an ageing satellite, made China only the third country in the world -- after the United States and the former Soviet Union -- to down an object in space. US trade official Christopher Padilla said in Beijing last week that the test and the general lack of transparency about China's military modernisation had contributed toward mistrust between the countries, citing it as a reason for tighter US rules on high-tech exports. But Zhang said it was the lack of understanding and communication that had led to suspicions.

"China has never joined any military alliance, never sought military expansion, nor built overseas military bases," he argued. The Chinese army is taking "pro-active and pragmatic" measures to improve transparency, said Zhang, citing the release of five white papers on China's national defence policy since 1998.

by P. Parameswaran
Beijing (AFP) Feb 1, 2007
China insisted Thursday it did not want an arms race in space but refrained from commenting on Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's claims that its satellite-destroying test had broken international law. China's foreign ministry refused to react directly to Abe's comments that Beijing had violated an international space treaty when it shot down one of its own satellites with a missile on January 11.

"We have already stated our position," spokeswoman Jiang Yu said when asked about Abe's comments.

"Since so many other countries are concerned about the peaceful uses of outer space and oppose the weaponisation of space and an arms race in space, we call on them to make common efforts with us to realise this goal."

Abe told the Japanese parliament on Wednesday that he believed China's test was not "in compliance with basic international rules such as the Outer Space Treaty".

The 1967 UN treaty, which bans weapons of mass destruction in space, says that all nations should avoid contamination of space and be held liable for any damage caused.

The United States has voiced concern that debris from the Chinese test could damage satellites or the manned International Space Station.

Jiang said she was not aware of the specific information concerning space debris but insisted that China would be a force for "peace and stability."

"China has not and will not participate in an arms race with other countries and will not threaten any other country," Jiang said.

After destroying the satellite, China said it had the right to carry out the test.

The United States and the then Soviet Union are the only other nations to have carried similar tests. They stopped the practice in 1985, in part over concerns about the debris left in space.

earlier related report
US reviewing space cooperation with China after anti-satellite test
Washington (AFP) Feb 03 - The United States said Friday it was reevaluating possible space cooperation with China, including joint moon exploration, following Beijing's recent anti-satellite weapon test.

China's test of a satellite-killing missile last month was "inconsistent" with an agreement between US President George W. Bush and Chinese President Hu Jintao to forge cooperation in the civil space area, the State Department said.

"Any future civil space cooperation with China will need to be evaluated within the context of China's ASAT (anti-satellite) test," department spokesman Edgar Vasquez told AFP.

Washington has protested the test both to China's ambassador in Washington and to the foreign ministry in Beijing and has asked for an explanation of exactly what occurred.

It is concerned that the test, which destroyed one of China's own orbiting satellites with a ballistic missile, has scattered debris in space that could endanger the manned International Space Station and other orbiting satellites.

Vasquez's comments come as China launched an experimental navigation satellite into space early Saturday, the nation's first space launch since the January 11 satellite-killing missile test.

The Beidou (Big Dipper) satellite was launched from the Xichang Satellite Launching Centre in southwest China's Sichuan province aboard a Long March 3-A rocket and successfully placed into its planned orbit, Xinhua news agency said.

Vasquez said that during Hu's visit to the United States last April, he and Bush agreed to explore the possibility of some cooperation in the civil space area, such as in lunar space exploration.

"Immediately following China's ASAT test, the concerns we raised with China included our view that the test was inconsistent with the two presidents' agreement to seek cooperation in the civil space area," Vasquez said.

The test made China only the third country in the world -- after the United States and the former Soviet Union -- to down an object in space.

Washington and Moscow stopped the practice in 1985, in part over concerns about the debris left in space.

Over the past several years, NASA's "bilateral interactions" with China had been very limited because of "government-to-government issues," said Jason Sharp, spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

"No bilateral discussions were ongoing or planned either before or after China's anti-satellite test," he told AFP.

The White House said recently the United States believed that China's development and testing of such weapons was "inconsistent with the constructive relationship that Bush and Hu had outlined, including civil space cooperation," Sharp said.

Washington has been "pretty strong" in meetings with Beijing over the test, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters on Wednesday.

China was told "that they needed to come clean fully in public as to what the data (were) concerning this test, what the motivations behind the test were, what their plans were for future such tests, and how this squared with their stated policy of not wanting to militarize space," McCormack said.

Beijing has long sought closer cooperation with the United States on space but Washington has been lukewarm because of concerns about the involvement of China's military in its space program.

China entered the exclusive rank of top space nations in 2003 when it sent up its first manned mission, joining the United States and Russia.

In 2005 it launched a second orbiting mission with two astronauts, and also hopes to send an unmanned probe to the Moon by 2010.

China spends 500 million dollars a year on its space programs, according to official figures. NASA's proposed budget for 2007 is nearly 17 billion dollars.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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China To Launch New Series Of Oceanic Survey Satellites
Beijing, China (XNA) Feb 02, 2007
China's State Council has endorsed plans to launch the second-generation of the country's oceanic survey satellites, the state's top ocean research official said on Thursday. The "Haiyang-2" (Ocean 2) series of satellites, a crucial component of China's civil spacecraft program, would be used to collect data on offshore wind fields, ocean circulation, tides, and sea surface temperatures, said Sun Zhihui, director of State Oceanic Administration.







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