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Asian News

China's Military Proposes Cooperation

Friday, March 23, 2007 4:50:01 PM
By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN

   This image released by the Department of Defense shows U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Marine Gen. Peter Pace,  center, and his wife, Lynne, as they visit the "Great Wall" at Badaling, China, Friday, March 23, 2007. Pace, the Pentagon's top general, is in Beijing on a visit aimed at expanding military-to-military links, including joint search-and-rescue exercises and courses bringing together junior officers.   (AP Photo/Department of Defense, D. Myles Cullen)BEIJING (AP) - China's military is proposing officer exchanges and other confidence-building measures with the U.S. Army and may be inching closer to setting up a "hotline" for emergency communication with Washington, the top U.S. general said Friday. However, Marine Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he received no new information in meetings with Chinese military chiefs about Beijing's test of an anti-satellite weapon in January that raised concern in Washington. He said he continued to press China's generals for more transparency about the aims of their military buildup.

"I used the example of the anti-satellite test as how sometimes the international community can be confused, because it was a surprise that China did that, and it wasn't clear what their intent was," Pace said.

Pace said he immediately agreed to study the proposals put forward Friday by Gen. Liang Guanglie, chief of the PLA's General Staff Department. Liang's move suggested a departure from the skepticism with which the highly secretive People's Liberation Army has long regarded cooperation with the U.S. military.


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