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. Top Chinese General To Visit As US Calls For Greater Military Cooperation

Gates to hold talks with Japan's new government next week
US Defense Secretary Robert Gates will travel to Japan and South Korea next week and then attend a NATO meeting in Slovakia on October 23, the Pentagon said on Wednesday. Gates will meet with the newly elected government in Japan to discuss security in the region and the "ongoing transformation of the alliance" with Tokyo, press secretary Geoff Morrell told reporters. In Seoul, Gates will seek to "reinforce America's commitment" to the US alliance with South Korea, he said. Gates then will proceed to Bratislava for a NATO meeting of defense ministers that coincides with a pivotal White House strategy review of the war in Afghanistan, Morrell said. The defense chief's trip to Japan, in advance of a scheduled November 12-13 visit by President Barack Obama, comes amid a renewed debate about where to move the controversial US Marine Corps Futenma Air Base - now located in a densely populated urban area of Okinawa. The Futenma base on the island, which hosts more than half of the 47,000 American troops stationed in Japan, has long angered residents because of aircraft noise and frictions between the community and US service personnel. Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama has said he wants to review a 2006 accord with Washington under which the current base would be closed, thousands of Marines moved to Guam, and others moved to a new US base to be built by 2014 in an Okinawa coastal area. The premier has said he wants a "more equal" relationship with the United States, Japan's traditional top ally, but also voiced admiration for Obama. Before visiting Tokyo and Seoul, Gates will stop in Hawaii to oversee a change in leadership at US Pacific Command, Morrell said.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 14, 2009
China's second-ranking military officer will travel to Washington later this month on a week-long visit designed to promote trust and avoid "misunderstandings," the Pentagon said Wednesday.

General Xu Caihou, vice chairman of the People's Liberation Army central military commission, will hold high-level meetings from October 24-31 and visit military commands and bases across the United States, press secretary Geoff Morrell told a news conference.

Since Defense Secretary Robert Gates paid a visit to China two years ago, the Chinese official "has been committed to fostering a better and deeper strategic dialogue with that country, especially better trust and transparency between our two militaries," Morrell said.

Gates "has been pushing for quite some time to have this kind of visit," he said.

"The more transparency there is, the more dialogue that goes on, the less chance there is for a misunderstanding between two very formidable powers on the world's stage," Morrell said.

China is in the midst of a drive to modernize its armed forces and has announced large military budget increases in recent years, prompting US officials to question Beijing's intentions.

The two nations also experienced a series of standoffs involving Chinese vessels and US navy ships in waters off China earlier this year.

China cut military exchanges with the United States for months last year over a proposed 6.5-billion-dollar US arms package to Taiwan, but agreed to resume them in February.

Since then, the two countries have held several rounds of military talks.

During his tour, the Chinese general was due to visit sites from all the US armed services, including the US Naval Academy in Maryland, US Strategic Command in Nebraska, Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada, the US Army's Fort Benning in Georgia, the North Island Naval Air Station in San Diego and US Pacific Command in Hawaii, Morrell said.

"We will show him a great deal of how our military operates in this country," he added.

US calls for greater contact with China military
The United States called Wednesday for more interaction with China's military, as the two nations try to build trust over defence issues amid US concerns about Beijing's rapid military buildup.

"More still needs to be done to ensure that our defence and military establishments both have greater... interaction with one another," US Assistant Secretary of State Kurt Campbell told reporters.

The two nations also need to develop "rules of the road for how we cooperate in the future", he said on a trip to Beijing that comes two weeks after China showed off military weaponry in a National Day parade.

Campbell, whose visit is partly aimed at laying the groundwork for US President Barack Obama's visit to China next month, was due to meet Chinese defence officials later Wednesday.

"It is incumbent on the United States and China to take steps... so that as our two militaries increasingly operate in proximity to one another, that we establish procedures... so that we can avoid crises and miscalculations on either side," he said.

China is in the midst of a drive to modernise its armed forces and has announced large military budget increases in recent years, prompting US officials to question Beijing's intentions.

The two nations also experienced a series of standoffs involving Chinese vessels and US navy ships in waters off China earlier this year.

China cut military exchanges with the United States for months last year over a proposed 6.5-billion-dollar US arms package to Taiwan, but agreed to resume them in February.

Since then, the two countries have held several rounds of military talks.

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India and China traded diplomatic jabs Tuesday over a recent visit by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to a border region at the core of a long-standing dispute between the neighbours. Singh visited Arunachal Pradesh on October 3 to campaign ahead of state elections there, but refrained from saying anything on China or the border dispute. Stressing that the state was "an integral and ... read more

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