CHINA BOOSTS DEFENSE SPENDING AMID MILITARY MODERNIZATION
China on Monday unveiled its
largest rise in defense spending in three years, setting a target of 8.1
percent growth over 2017, fuelling an ambitious military modernization program
amid rising concerns over its security.
The 2018 defense
budget will be 1.11 trillion yuan ($175 billion), according to a report issued
at the opening of China’s annual meeting of parliament.
The defense spending
figure is closely watched around the world for clues to China’s strategic
intentions as it develops new military capabilities, including stealth
fighters, aircraft carriers and anti-satellite missiles.
China will“advance
all aspects of military training and war preparedness, and firmly and
resolvedly safeguard national sovereignty, security, and development
interests”, Premier Li Keqiang told the opening session in an address.
“Faced with profound
changes in the national security environment” the absolute leadership of the
military by the ruling Communist Party must be observed, and the unity between
the government and the military, and the people and the military, must always
be“strong as stone”, he said.
Li also said China
had basically completed efforts to cut back the size of its armed forces by
300,000, a move President Xi Jinping announced in 2015 to improve efficiency
that had caused unease in the ranks.
The 2018 defense
spending increase comes as China’s economic growth expanded 6.9 percent last
year, the first acceleration in annual growth since 2010. But China kept its
2018 economic growth target at around 6.5 percent, said Li, the same as in
2017, despite exceeding that year’s target.
Last year, defense
spending was set to increase by just 7 percent, to 1.044 trillion yuan ($164.60
billion), or about one-quarter of the proposed U.S. defense spending for the
year. In 2016, it grew by 7.6 percent.
“The pace and scale
of this build-up is really dramatic. It is extremely alarming for Australia and
many other countries in the region,” said Sam Roggeveen, a visiting fellow at
the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre of the Australian National University
in Canberra.
“There is every
indication that China wants to expand what it will call defense capabilities in
the South China Sea. I expect eventually we will see warships and aircraft
there regularly, if not based there permanently. What is unclear, however, is
whether the United States will want to rise to that challenge.”
HIDDEN SPENDING
China does not
provide a breakdown of how it allocates its defense budget, leading neighbors
and other military powers to complain that Beijing’s lack of transparency has
added to regional tension.
Diplomats say
China’s defense numbers probably underestimate true military spending for the
People’s Liberation Army, the world’s largest armed forces, which are in the
midst of an impressive modernization program overseen by Xi.
One senior Asia
diplomat, speaking before the announcement, said the real rise would probably
be at least double what China revealed, considering its efforts to build up the
industrial military complex and deepen military-civilian integration.
“Some spending will
be hidden in civilian spending,” said the diplomat, speaking on condition of
anonymity.
China’s military
build-up has rattled the nerves of its neighbors, particularly because of its
increasingly assertive stance in territorial disputes in the East and South
China Seas and over Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its own.
“We would like to
see China be more transparent about its defense policy, including spending and
the direction of its military power,” Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide
Suga told a regular briefing.
With worries about
potential disputes with the United States in the region, China’s military had
mounted what defense sources and diplomats viewed as a lobbying campaign for
more spending.
In an article on its
website, China’s Defence Ministry cited Chen Zhou, a researcher at the Academy
of Military Science, as saying the spending increase was“reasonable”
and“sustainable”, and that there were no“hidden military funds”.
U.S. President
Donald Trump has proposed a military budget that is the largest since 2011 and
focused on beefing up the United States’ nuclear defenses and countering the
growing strength of China and Russia.
The proposal, part
of Trump’s budget request for the U.S. government, would provide the Pentagon
$617 billion and an additional $69 billion to fund ongoing wars in fiscal year
2019. That is $74 billion more than in the previous fiscal year’s budget.
Vice Foreign
Minister Zhang Yesui on Sunday said China’s“moderate” defense spending rises in
the past few years were less than other major countries and would not threaten
anyone.
SOURCE: AFP
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