Pentagon
again asks China to end island building, seeks more military contact
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[June 12, 2015]
By David Brunnstrom
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Defense
Secretary Ash Carter met a top Chinese general on Thursday and repeated
a U.S. call for a halt to land reclamation in the South China Sea, while
stressing that the Pentagon remained committed to expanding military
contacts with China.
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In the meeting with General Fan Changlong, a deputy head of
China's powerful Central Military Commission, Carter stressed his
commitment to developing "a sustained and substantive U.S.-China
military-to-military relationship", the Pentagon said.
It said this would be based on a shared desire to deepen cooperation
in areas including humanitarian assistance, disaster response,
peacekeeping, counter-piracy, as well as "constructive management of
differences".
In reiterating U.S. concerns about tensions in the South China Sea,
Carter called on China and all rival claimants to halt land
reclamation and militarization of disputed territory, and to pursue
a peaceful resolution in accordance with international law, the
Pentagon statement said.
Carter also reaffirmed his commitment to reach a consensus by
September on a memorandum of understanding aimed at reducing the
risk of accidents when the two countries' aircraft operate in close
proximity, the statement said.
Fan told Carter that China's construction work in the South China
Sea was mostly to improve living conditions in order to better
protect its sovereignty. He also said China had a right to build on
its own territory and deploy forces there, China's Defence Ministry
said.
Fan also urged the United States to stop its military activities in
the South China Sea.
"The South China Sea issue is only an interlude in Sino-U.S. ties
and both sides should look further ahead and pay attention to more
important and bigger international and regional issues," it
paraphrased Fan as saying.
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Fan's visit to the Pentagon was part of a week-long trip to the
United States, which will include a meeting with U.S. National
Security Adviser Susan Rice at the White House on Friday. Earlier
this week, Fan visited the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan and
U.S. military bases.
Wu Xi, deputy chief of mission at the Chinese embassy in Washington,
said on Wednesday that Fan's trip was aimed at preparing the way for
a visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping in September.
China protested to the United States last month after a U.S. spy
plane with a television crew aboard flew close to artificial islands
China has been building in the South China Sea.
The need for an understanding on air operations was shown last year
when the Pentagon accused a Chinese fighter pilot of conducting a
"dangerous intercept" of a U.S. Navy patrol plane by flying a few
yards from the U.S. jet and performing acrobatic maneuvers around
it.
(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in BEIJING; Editing by Ken
Wills and Paul Tait)
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