US biggest perceived threat to PLA: China”s top military strategist

Beijing, April 26 (ANI): Rear Admiral Yang Yi has said US is the biggest perceived

threat to the People’s Liberation Army (PLA).

Yang Yi was the former head of strategic studies at the PLA’s National University of

Defence.

Dissonance over cross-Strait relationship was the most likely trigger for a Sino-US

nuclear war claimed Yi.

About rivals Japan and India, the China daily quoted Yi as saying that while Japan does

not have the ability, India is more worried about China.

Yi suggested that Beijing should maintain healthy relations with Washington while at the

same time covering for potential threats and pressures.

“Fortunately, the risk of a Sino-US confrontation is decreasing due to the relaxation of

the Taiwan question,” China Daily quoted Yi as saying. The Taiwan issue would be

resolved politically not militarily, said Yi.

“Those weapons will be ours sooner or later.” Said Yi of US arms sales to Taiwan,

reflecting the PLA’s self assured stance regarding Taiwan.

Yi first made spoke about the subject while addressing delegates at the US-China

Government Executive Global Leadership Course last week. The 17-member US group included

office directors of NASA, Department of Defence and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

The comparative educational dialogue involving senior US officials is the first such

interaction between Washington and Beijing.

“A US navy official in charge of intelligence asked the question and he quickly

responded that it was the same case for China about the US,” said course director Sun

Zhe. He said that the frank communication by Yi should not be seen as a threat, and that

it would help the two powers understand one another better, especially Beijing’s

position on the Taiwan issue. (ANI)

China, US to resume military talks on February 27-28

New Delhi, Feb 16 (ANI): China and the US will resume their military talks with a defense policy dialogue in Beijing on February 27-28.

The dialogue between the countries’ senior military officers was postponed in November after the former President George W. Bush Administration announced in October to sell 6.5 billion dollars worth of arms to Taiwan despite China’s protest.

The dialogue will be informal, Defense Ministry spokesman Hu Changming said on Sunday, the China Daily reported.

The talks, a routine yearly meeting between Washington and Beijing since 1997, is likely to be hosted by a US Deputy Defense Minister and a Deputy Chief of China’s Army.

The talks will focus on the expansion of bilateral military cooperation and joint implementation of measures to address security concerns across the world, especially in East Asia.

“The Barack Obama Administration has set a positive tone to work with China,” said Rear Admiral Yang Yi, senior military expert with the University of National Defense.

“So the US Defense Department must have worked closely with the State Department to schedule the dialogue right after Secretary of State Hilary Clinton’s visit,” he added.

On the eve of her first overseas tour as Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton said her administration would use “smart power” to work with historic allies and emerging countries in order to find regional and global solutions to common global problems.

“And we look forward to improved relations across the Straits,” Clinton said while addressing a gathering of Asia Society in New York.

She said the US and the mainland would resume mid-level military discussions by this month. She will arrive in Beijing on Friday to discuss the global financial crisis, regional security and climate change. (ANI)