Rumsfeld questions China's expansion of its military power

US/CHINA: US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld accused China on Saturday of enhancing its ability to project power at a time…

US/CHINA: US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld accused China on Saturday of enhancing its ability to project power at a time when it faced no threat.

He said Beijing would have to expand political freedoms to maintain economic growth and influence.

The Pentagon has been raising alarms over China's military modernisation for several years. Mr Rumsfeld's rhetorical assault, in a speech to a conference of regional defence ministers, underscores a growing concern in the US over China's rising military, economic and diplomatic power.

However, facing an audience anxious about a possible US-China confrontation in Asia, Mr Rumsfeld toned down parts of his prepared speech, and insisted Washington sought neither to destabilise China nor fan a competition for regional influence.

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"China appears to be expanding its missile forces, allowing them to reach targets in many areas of the world, not just the Pacific region, while also expanding its missile capabilities within this region," he told an annual conference hosted by the International Institute of Strategic Studies.

"Since no nation threatens China, one must wonder: why this growing investment? Why these continuing large and expanding arms purchases?"

One line dropped from the prepared text said: "One might be concerned that this build-up is putting the delicate military balance in the region at risk - especially, but not only, with respect to Taiwan."

A Chinese foreign ministry official asked if Mr Rumsfeld really believed China faced no threat and if the US felt threatened by China.

"I don't know of nations that threaten China," Mr Rumsfeld said.

"No, we don't feel threatened by the emergence of China. It strikes me that the emergence of China is perfectly understandable." - (Reuters)