Trump's missile treaty pullout could
escalate tension with China
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[October 23, 2018]
By Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. withdrawal
from a Cold War-era nuclear arms treaty with Russia could give the
Pentagon new options to counter Chinese missile advances but experts
warn the ensuing arms race could greatly escalate tensions in the
Asia-Pacific.
U.S. officials have been warning for years that the United States was
being put at a disadvantage by China's development of increasingly
sophisticated land-based missile forces, which the Pentagon could not
match thanks to the U.S. treaty with Russia.
President Donald Trump has signaled he may soon give the Pentagon a
freer hand to confront those advances, if he makes good on threats to
pull out of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, which required
elimination of short- and intermediate-range nuclear and conventional
missiles.
Dan Blumenthal, a former Pentagon official now at the American
Enterprise Institute, said a treaty pullout could pave the way for the
United States to field easier-to-hide, road-mobile conventional missiles
in places like Guam and Japan.
That would make it harder for China to consider a conventional first
strike against U.S. ships and bases in the region. It could also force
Beijing into a costly arms race, forcing China to spend more on missile
defenses.
"It will change the picture fundamentally," Blumenthal said.
Even as Trump has blamed Russian violations of the treaty for his
decision, he has also pointed a finger at China. Beijing was not party
to the INF treaty and has been fielding new and more deadly missile
forces.
These include China's DF-26 intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM),
which has a maximum range of 4,000 km (2,500 miles) and which the
Pentagon says can threaten U.S. land and sea-based forces as far away as
the Pacific island of Guam. It was first fielded in 2016.
"If Russia is doing it (developing these missiles) and China is doing it
and we're adhering to the agreement, that's unacceptable," Trump said on
Sunday.
John Bolton, White House national security advisor, noted that recent
Chinese statements suggest it wanted Washington to stay in the treaty.
"And that's perfectly understandable. If I were Chinese, I would say the
same thing," he told the Echo Moskvy radio station. "Why not have the
Americans bound, and the Chinese not bound?"
GROWING THREAT
U.S. officials have so far relied on other capabilities as a
counter-balance to China, like missiles fired from U.S. ships or
aircraft. But advocates for a U.S. land-based missile response say that
is the best way to deter Chinese use of its muscular land-based missile
forces.
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President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally for U.S. Senator
Ted Cruz (R-TX) in Houston, Texas, U.S., October 22, 2018.
REUTERS/Leah Millis
Kelly Magsamen, who helped craft the Pentagon's Asian policy under the
Obama administration, said China's ability to work outside of the INF
treaty had vexed policymakers in Washington, long before Trump came into
office.
But she cautioned that any new U.S. policy guiding missile deployments
in Asia would need to be carefully coordinated with allies, something
that does not appear to have happened yet.
Mismanagement of expectations surrounding a U.S. treaty pullout
could also unsettle security in the Asia-Pacific, she cautioned.
"It's potentially destabilizing," she said.
Experts warn that China would put pressure on countries in the
region to refuse U.S. requests to position missiles there.
Abraham Denmark, a former senior Pentagon official under Obama, said
Guam, Japan and even Australia were possible locations for U.S.
missile deployments.
"But there are a lot of alliance questions that appear at first
glance to be very tricky," he cautioned.
Still, current and former U.S. officials say Washington is right to
focus on China's missile threat. Harry Harris, who led U.S. military
forces in the Pacific before becoming U.S. ambassador to Seoul, said
earlier this year that the United States was at a disadvantage.
"We have no ground-based (missile) capability that can threaten
China because of, among other things, our rigid adherence ... to the
treaty," Harris told a Senate hearing in March, without calling for
the treaty to be scrapped.
Asked about Trump's comments, China's foreign ministry said a
unilateral U.S. withdrawal would have a negative impact and urged
the United States to "think thrice before acting."
"Talking about China on the issue of unilaterally pulling out of the
treaty is completely mistaken," spokeswoman Hua Chunying said.
(Reporting by Phil Stewart; additional reporting by Idrees Ali,
David Brunnstrom and Eric Beech; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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