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Related stories:
US slammed for playing up "China military
threat"
Pentagon paper hurts China-US ties: expert
US, not China, stands at
strategic crossroads
WASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (Xinhuanet) -- A U.S. scholar said
Thursday that China's military spending is rather modest and that a Pentagon
report that faults Chinese defense spending is aimed at justifying its own
inflating expenditures.
"I do not see how China's military spending is
terribly threatening the vast military capabilities of the United States," Ted
Galen Carpenter, vice president for defense and foreign policy studies at the
Cato Institute, said in an interview with Xinhua.
Carpenter, who is vice president for defense and
foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute, made the remarks when asked about
the Quadrennial Defense Review Report (QDR) released by the Pentagon last
Friday.
He said China's defense budget, with an official
figure of some 30 billion dollars, is only a small amount in comparison to U.S.
military spending which is going to be about 440 billion dollars next year,
excluding the costs of operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, he said.
"China's military spending is rather modest. It is
not alarming," Carpenter said.
As for his view on the statement in the QDR's China
section that "the pace and scope of China's military build-up already puts
regional military balances at risk," Carpenter said: "I think that is where the
Chinese government can take issue with the QDR... We do not see a massive
military build-up that will raise questions about Beijing's motives."
Carpenter believed the main purpose of the QDR was to
justify the Pentagon's inflating military spending and "the section on China is
just a means to that end."
If the Pentagon said the global situation did not
look very threatening, the United States had no obvious enemies other than
terrorists or low-tech threats, Congress would significantly reduce the defense
budget, Carpenter said.
"So the Pentagon currently has every incentive to
portray the global threat environment in the most alarming terms," he said.
However, Carpenter said the Pentagon report would not
dominate U.S. foreign policy toward China because the Bush administration
regards the relationship with China as "a critically important one."
Neither the White House nor officials at the State
Department talk much about the so-called "China threat" because "that creates
animosity in the relationship between Beijing and Washington and that is not
something the White House or the State Department wants," Carpenter said.
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