|

China
disavows general's comments on space militarization
BEIJING (AFP) - China on November 5 denied it would ever
participate in a space arms race, disavowing comments by a
top general who said Chinese armed forces should prepare for
the militarization of outer space.
"I want to point out China has all along upheld the
peaceful use of outer space. We oppose the weaponization of
outer space or a space arms race," Foreign Ministry spokesman
Ma Zhaoxu told reporters.
"China has never and will not participate in an outer
space arms race in any form. The position of China on this
point remains unchanged," he said.
Ma was asked to respond to comments this week by Air Force
Commander Xu Qiliang of the People's Liberation Army, who
was quoted by state-run media as calling the militarization
of space a "historical inevitability."
"We must build an outer space force that conforms with
the needs of our nation's development (and) the demands of
space age development," Xu was quoted as saying in the
Nov. 2 edition of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) Daily.
China has long maintained that an ongoing build-up of its
military is purely for defensive purposes and that rapid development
of its space capabilities is peaceful in nature.
Xu's comments sparked speculation of a possible shift in
China's position.
General Kevin Chilton, who heads the US Strategic Command,
said on Nov. 3 that he wanted more information on China's
position when asked about Xu's remarks.
Beijing's space program "is an area that we'll want
to explore and understand exactly what China's intentions
are here, and why they might want to go in that direction
and what grounds might accommodate a different direction,"
he said.
In January 2007, China surprised the world by shooting down
one of its own weather satellites in a test seen by many,
including the United States, as a possible trigger of an arms
race in space.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20091105/sc_afp/chinamilitaryspaceus_20091105171333
|