American Forces Press Service
ABOARD A MILITARY AIRCRAFT, July 11,
2012 – Recognizing that the United States and China have more areas of
convergence than differences, the top U.S. officer in the Pacific said he’s
more convinced after his recent visit there that the two countries can build on
common ground as they strive to get their military-to-military relationship
back on track.
Navy Adm. Samuel J. Locklear III spent
four days in China in late June, meeting with Chinese Defense Minister Gen.
Liang Guanglie, Gen. Ma Xiaotian, deputy chief of the general staff, and other
senior military leaders.
The visit was the first for a U.S.
Pacific Command chief in four years, representing what Locklear said he hopes
will be a new start in what he conceded has been an “on-again, off-again”
relationship between the two militaries.
China abruptly severed ties in early
2010 over U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, and the military-to-military relationship
has slowly resumed since 2011.
As he took the helm at Pacom in April,
Locklear said he would make restoring the relationship a top priority.
“Both nations realize that it’s not in
the best interests of anyone in the world for the U.S. and China not to have a
favorable relationship with each other, and that good military-to-military
relations [are] critical to that,” he said.
Speaking to American Forces Press
Service during a flight to Australia, Locklear called the visit to China an
initial step in the right direction. “You can’t have a relationship with
somebody you don’t talk to,” he said. “So you have to start with that. And then
you have to have a frank dialogue. And I think the Chinese, like Americans,
appreciate frank dialogue. So when you tell them how you see it, and they tell
you how they see it, then at least you know where you are starting from.”
Locklear said he explained the renewed
U.S. focus on Asia and the Pacific, a cornerstone of the new U.S. strategic
guidance, and emphasized that it in no way intends to “contain” China.
“I outlined the Asia-Pacific rebalance
so they could understand what we are doing and why we are doing it,” he said of
his address at the China Academy of Military Science. “And I pointed out to
them that this is about trying to provide a security environment with our
allies and … our strategic partners and our emerging partners that is good for
everyone.”
Locklear said he told the Chinese that
they should have not only a role in that security environment, but “a
productive role in it.”
China faces decisions about how it will
enter into that security environment, he said. Meanwhile, the United States,
along with its allies and partners, will have to determine how they engage with
China in that environment.
“So there is a responsibility on both
sides,” the admiral said. “And we have a couple of options – not just us, but
our allies and partners. We can encourage China to make good decisions. Or we
can make it difficult for them to make good decisions, and then we have to live
with the outcome.”
While underscoring the importance of
positive relations between the two countries, Locklear said he made clear
during his visit that the lack of transparency about China’s military buildup
and the motivation behind it troubles the United States and many other regional
nations.
“What we are all concerned about is
miscalculation,” the admiral said, calling military-to-military engagements a
way to help in clarifying intentions and preventing conflict.
“Neither government, nor do I think any
of our allies or our partners, want to have a conflict between China and the
United States,” he said. “It just doesn’t make any sense.”
Working through areas of disagreement
will take time, he acknowledged, expressing hope that it can be done in a way
that “prevents miscalculation and prevents unnecessary confrontation that is
not good for anybody.”
Locklear said he and his Chinese hosts
addressed several areas of contention, including China’s claims over the South
China Sea. “That whole area is a small backyard, and it is owned by a lot of
people, and they don’t all agree where the fence lines are,” he said. The
United States has not taken sides in the territorial dispute there, but firmly
believes that “whatever happens in that part of the world has to be resolved
peacefully and without coercion,” he added.
What the United States takes issue with,
he said, are China’s maritime claims that would hinder freedom of trade and
movement through international waters.
“This is a place where we diverge, and
[that] has caused difficulties,” Locklear said. “So we have to keep working
with [China] on that and we have to keep working to ensure that as we disagree
on that, it doesn’t lead to miscalculation that drives us in a direction we
don’t want to go.”
His talks in China also extended to
another area of contention: arms sales to Taiwan. The United States supports
the “one-China policy,” he said, but also is committed to ensuring that Taiwan
has a “minimum credible deterrence.”
Locklear expressed hope that the United
States and China can look beyond these issues and focus on common interests as
they forge a more positive path in their relationship.
“It is in all our best interests to
figure out how to do this together,” he said. “As China emerges as a regional
power and maybe eventually a global economic power, the question is how do we …
help them do so in a positive way that promotes regional security and
prosperity?”
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