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US Asks China To Help Maintain Global Maritime Security

Admiral Michael Mullen, US chief of naval operations, has called on China to consider joining the "1,000-ship Navy" concept.
by P. Parameswaran
Washington (AFP) Apr 10, 2007
The United States on Wednesday asked China to join a global effort to maintain international maritime security, as the Pentagon welcomed Beijing's navy chief Vice Admiral Wu Shengli on a rare visit.

Admiral Michael Mullen, the US chief of naval operations, called on Wu to consider "China's potential participation in global maritime partnership initiatives" during talks at the Pentagon, his spokesman, Commander John Kirby, told AFP.

Mullen was referring to the "1,000-ship Navy" concept, first proposed at an international seapower symposium in 2005, aimed at building -- on a voluntary basis -- a transnational network of navies, the shipping industry and law enforcement agencies to respond to crises or emergencies at sea.

The idea was tossed by two American admirals following the rapid international responses to the Asian tsunami in December 2004.

The United States, India, Australia and Japan, the four most powerful democratic nations in the Asia-Pacific region, joined hands in a swift operation to help in relief work during the disaster.

Wu "expressed interest" in the 1,000-ship Navy plan and "shared concerns in maritime security both regionally and globally," Kirby said.

The Chinese admiral "asked for more information" about the plan "so that he would better acquaint himself about it," he said.

Wu is on his first overseas visit since taking over the helm recently and the Washington trip comes just after the Beijing visit by General Peter Pace, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, aimed at boosting US-Sino military ties.

Mullen and Wu discussed "issues of mutual concerns", Kirby said, adding that the talks "contributed to a greater sense of transparency between the two leaders and our two navies."

Mullen, speaking at a Washington forum on Tuesday, noted that the Chinese were shifting from a "land-centric force to an air-centric and naval-centric force and clearly that force and capability has the potential to focus very much on the United States navy.

"So, clearly, those kind of technological investments have my attention," he said.

Mullen said the key was building up ties with China to better understand the nation as Washington had been doing particularly over the last couple of years.

"The key strategic issue for me is to have this relationship, understand strategic intent" and emphasizing about "transparency in what that strategic intent is."

Senior US officials have spoken critically of China's military budget, expressing concerns that the Chinese are under-reporting its size and that it is expanding too quickly.

China announced last month a 17.8-percent rise in military spending for this year to 45 billion dollars.

US Vice President Dick Cheney said last month that China's military build-up and its successful knocking out of one of its ageing satellites with a ballistic missile in January were "not consistent with Beijing's stated goal of a 'peaceful rise.'"

The Pentagon is soon expected to submit its annual report to Congress on China's military power.

Wu, who flew into Hawaii at the weekend, had an honor ceremony at Naval District Washington headquarters Wednesday before talks at the Pentagon.

On Thursday, he will visit the Naval Academy and on Friday make a trip to the fleet concentration area in Norfolk before returning at the weekend, said Pentagon spokesman Lieutenent Commander Jeff Davis.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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