
US Secretary of Defence Mark Esper listens during a press conference at the US Department of State following the 30th AUSMIN in Washington, DC on 28 July 2020. File Photo/Reuters/Pool/Brendan Smialowski
By Ben Blanchard | Reuters
ON THE WEB, 27 August 2020
The United States and China traded jibes as military tensions grow between the world’s two largest economies, with the US defence chief vowing not to “cede an inch” in the Pacific and China saying Washington was risking soldiers’ lives.
Both are at loggerheads over issues from technology and human rights to Chinese military activities in the disputed South China Sea, with each accusing the other of deliberately provocative behaviour.
In the latest US move against China ahead of November’s presidential election, Washington on Wednesday blacklisted 24 Chinese companies and targeted individuals over construction and military actions in the busy South China Sea waterway.
On Thursday, a US Navy warship carried out a routine operation near the Paracel Islands in the South China Sea, something frequently criticized by Beijing as threatening its sovereignty.
In Hawaii, US Defence Secretary Mark Esper said the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) wanted Beijing to project power globally via its military.
“To advance the CCP’s agenda, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) continues to pursue an aggressive modernization plan to achieve a world class military by the middle of the century,” Esper said.
“This will undoubtedly involve the PLA’s provocative behaviour in the South and East China Seas, and anywhere else the Chinese government has deemed critical to its interests.”
However, Esper said the United States wanted to “hopefully continue to work with the People’s Republic of China to get them back on a trajectory that is more aligned with the international rules based order.”
Speaking before a regional tour, Esper described the Indo-Pacific as the epicenter of a “great power competition with China.”
He added, “We’re not going to cede this region, an inch of ground if you will, to another country, any other country that thinks their form of government, their views on human rights, their views on sovereignty, their views on freedom of the press, freedom of religion, freedom of assembly, all those things, that somehow that’s better than what many of us share.”
President Donald Trump’s administration has repeatedly bashed China over issues including its handling of the coronavirus, a common theme during this week’s Republican National Convention.
In Beijing, China’s Defence Ministry shot back at “certain US politicians” it said were damaging Sino-US military ties in the run-up to the November election for their own selfish gain, even seeking to create military clashes.
“This kind of behaviour puts the lives of frontline officers and soldiers on both sides at risk,” spokesman Wu Qian told reporters at a monthly briefing on Thursday.
China is not scared of “provocation and pressure” from the United States, and will resolutely defend itself and not allow the United States to cause trouble, he added.
“We hope the US side will truly adopt a strategic vision, view China’s development with an open and rational attitude, and leave behind the quagmire of anxiety and entanglement.”
The tension has sparked fears of accidental conflict.
A US defence official told Reuters on Wednesday that China had launched four medium-range ballistic missiles that hit the South China Sea between Hainan Island and the Paracel Islands.
On Thursday, the Pentagon said it was concerned about China’s recent military exercises, including the firing of the missiles.
“Conducting military exercises over disputed territory in the South China Sea is counterproductive to easing tensions and maintaining stability,” the Pentagon said in a statement.
It added that the US military had told Chinese authorities in July that it would continue to monitor the situation with “the expectation that the PRC (People’s Republic of China) will reduce its militarization and coercion of its neighbours in the South China Sea.”
The US is planning to confront communist China now before it becomes too militarily powerful to take on. The CCP spends a big chunk of its GDP for military built up with the hope of invading Taiwan by preparing for a showdown with the US, if it comes to defend Taiwan.
The US was distracted for a long time by the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and pro-China elements like Henry Kissinger have held back the US by giving bad advise to US leaders. Now, as China builds huge military force, America is nervous that leaving it another decade would mean commie China might gain military parity with the US in which case it will be too late.
So, it’s going to confront head on while the CCP is condemned by the world and is exceedingly unpopular inside China, owing to its handling of the CCP virus. If the US stages a blitskreig by ejecting the Chinese from occupying artificial islands in South China Sea, this will damage the standing of Xi further and damage his chances of a third term.
The US is determined that it will do everything to smash the CCP ambition of world domination. Towards that end, US Secretary of defence, Mark Esper is drumming up support from US allies to prepare themselves to shoulder the military mission by committing troops, logistics and communication to defeat the PLA which is the CCP militia that is responsible for the survival of the CCP dictatorship.
Giving most favoured nation status and admitting the CCP into the WTO only made it more dogmatic in its ideological orthodoxy. Now, the US has changed track to bring about change with China’s behaviour by changing its leadership. Without regime change, this monster will only get more vicious and expansionist. Now, the die is cast to smother the CCP both militarily and economically.