SINGAPORE: Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel said Saturday that the United States would live up to its promise and deploy more cutting-edge military technology in Asia and the Pacific, even in an age of austerity.
Speaking a week before a summit meeting in California between President Barack Obama and China's new leader, Xi Jinping, Hagel sought to reassure Washington's nervous Asian allies - who are concerned about China's expanding naval activities - that the United States would maintain its presence in the region.
At the same, in a speech here at the International Institute for Strategic Studies' annual conference, Hagel stressed the need for more talks between the U.S. and Chinese militaries to build trust and reduce the risk of miscalculation at a time of mounting rivalry.
Overall, he said, the United States would keep its "decisive military edge," an oblique but distinct reference to U.S. military superiority. China has announced an 11.2 percent increase in military spending this year, part of its rapid military modernization.
He stressed that new technologies would entail spending fewer resources in a smarter way, saying that the Navy had launched an experimental drone from an aircraft carrier last month for the first time. It was feat, he said, that ushered in a new era of naval aviation. Unstated - but understood by many in the audience - was that China last year put into service its first aircraft carrier, an old Ukrainian vessel refitted by the Chinese.
Hagel also said the United States would deploy a solid-state laser aboard the naval vessel the Ponce next year. He said it would provide "an affordable answer" to counter "threats like missiles, swarming small boats and remotely piloted aircraft."
He said that the first of four littoral combat ships to rotate through Singapore had recently arrived and that he would visit the ship, the Freedom, on Sunday. The littoral combat ship is a new class of speedy war vessels that can operate on the ocean and in shallow coastal waters. Each costs $700 million, the Pentagon says.
After his speech, Hagel was challenged during a question-and-answer session by a Chinese delegate to the conference who said that she and China were not convinced that the United States wanted a "comprehensive" relationship with China. The new U.S. policy in Asia and the Pacific amounted to containment of China, said the delegate, Maj. Gen. Yao Yunzhu, director of the Center for China-America Defense Relations at the Academy of Military Science in Beijing.
Hagel responded that Washington wanted more transparency in military dealings with China.
"You have to talk to each other, be direct with each other, be inclusive," he said.
In a feisty address that opened the conference, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung of Vietnam laid bare the rising regional tensions by repeatedly lamenting the lack of trust between China and its neighbors, and between China and the United States, although he did not mention China by name.
Regional organizations are supposed to take care of such tensions, he said, but what is "still missing is strategic trust in the implementation of these arrangements."
As evidence of the problems, several diplomats from U.S. allies said they were concerned about a new map of the South China Sea that was issued this week by Sinomaps Press, the Chinese mapping authority.
Beijing has long claimed the islands and land "features" within what it calls a nine-dash line drawn decades ago on maps of the South China Sea, a vital trade route where China is growing more assertive.
About 80 percent of the South China Sea is inside that line, which was drawn up by China in 1947 before the Communist takeover. The boundary is not recognized by any other country but has been the basis of China's territorial claims to islands like the Scarborough Shoal, which it effectively seized from the Philippines last year.
The new map, according to Asian diplomats who have seen it, takes a further step and redesignates the nine-dash line as a national boundary. Its release was delayed from late last year so that it could be formally authorized by the Chinese senior leadership, according to a senior Asian diplomat, who declined to be quoted by name because of the sensitivity of the matter.
Wu Shicun, a Chinese official at the conference, denied that the new map showed national boundaries. Instead, he said, it showed new lines around the Diaoyu islands, a group in the East China Sea that Japan, which calls them the Senkaku, nationalized in September, leading Beijing to claim them for itself.
At the time, China said the line around the islands was drawn in accordance with Chinese law. A recent Pentagon report said they do not comport with the U.S. Convention on the Law of the Sea.
Wu, who heads the National Institute for South China Sea Studies, said Saturday that the new map was needed because there had not been an official map of the South China Sea and the East China Sea drawn for about 20 years.
The Economic Times
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