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The United States has refused to lift its sanctions against General Li Shangfu, the defence minister of China. Photo: EPA-EFE

China spells out ‘obstacles’ to resuming high-level military talks with the US

  • Defence ministry cites US arms sales to Taiwan, close-in reconnaissance missions and sanctions against minister as hurdles to top-level exchanges
  • ‘Military-to-military communication has not stopped’, spokesman says, confirming that China took part in a recent US-hosted defence meeting in Fiji
Arms sales to Taipei and a refusal to lift sanctions imposed on Chinese defence chief General Li Shangfu are still the main obstacles to resuming high-level military talks to Washington, Beijing has said.

The US “should mind its own business”, a defence ministry spokesman told a regular press briefing on Thursday, while clarifying that communication channels remained open.

“I want to clarify that military-to-military communication between China and the United States has not stopped,” ministry spokesman and Senior Colonel Wu Qian said.

Both sides had maintained “candid and effective communication” through military and diplomatic channels, he added.

Wu also confirmed reports that China had taken part in a US-hosted conference of defence chiefs in Fiji earlier this month.

The People’s Liberation Army delegation was led by General Xu Qiling, deputy chief of staff in the Joint Staff Department of China’s top defence command body, the Central Military Commission, Wu said.
Chinese defence ministry spokesman Wu Qian takes questions from the press. Photo: AP

The 25th annual Indo-Pacific Chiefs of Defence conference from August 14-16 was jointly hosted by Admiral John Aquilino, chief of the US Indo-Pacific Command, and his Fijian counterpart, Major General Jone Logavatu Kalouniwai, with 27 nations from the region taking part.

Xu met counterparts from the US, Singapore and other countries during the event, Wu said.

However, he also listed a string of “difficulties and obstacles” faced by the two militaries, including US President Joe Biden’s latest approval of direct military aid to Taiwan, US aircraft and warship missions in the Taiwan Strait and South China Sea, and continued sanctions against General Li.

“Hence, the Chinese side must of course take resolute countermeasures,” Wu said, referring to the suspension of high-level communications between the PLA and the Pentagon.

Beijing halted or suspended a raft of high-level dialogues with Washington, on issues ranging from military ties to climate change and anti-narcotics drives, in a furious response to then US House speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan last August despite repeated warnings against doing so.

In a first, US okays Taiwan military aid under scheme reserved for nations

In June, China rejected US defence secretary Lloyd Austin’s request to meet Li on the sidelines of the Shangri-la Dialogue in Singapore. China’s defence ministry then blamed the US for “seriously undermining mutual trust” while its embassy in Washington said the US should lift its “illegal unilateral sanctions” to create favourable conditions for dialogue.

Following the snub, the Pentagon said it was committed to “responsibly managing the relationship” with China.

On the other hand, US Indo-Pacific Command officials have complained about Chinese commanders overseeing the East and South China seas declining to answer calls from their US counterparts, or failing to attend regular conferences. They have raised concerns about the risks of a military confrontation or conflict sparked by such lack of communication.

03:45

China, US offer competing security visions for Asia-Pacific at security forum

China, US offer competing security visions for Asia-Pacific at security forum

Wu blamed the tensions on the US military’s “provocative” frequent and large-scale close-in reconnaissance missions along the Chinese coast.

“[The US] should mind its own business if it wants to manage risks,” he said. “China urges the US to stop its military provocations to prevent any extreme events that the world doesn’t want to see happening.

“We can only have communication and dialogue that is in line with our principles and does not go against our bottom lines,” Wu said.

“The US side, which has engaged in actions undermining our national interests, should have no illusions that the Chinese military would carry on with communications as if nothing had happened.”

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