Taipei Times,
Taiwan
Beijing Plays Pentagon for a 'Pack of Fools'
“In the wake of the North Korean nuclear test, this missile test suggests that Beijing has, if anything, taken on Pyongyang has a role model. ... the Chinese military is playing the Pentagon for a pack of fools.”
EDITORIAL
January 20, 2007
Taiwan - Taipei Times - Original
Article (English)
[The Telegraph, U.K.]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It took a while for the news to come out, but on Thursday last
week the Chinese military showed its true colors and fired a missile into
space, destroying an obsolete Chinese weather satellite.
In what must rank as the funniest comment to come out of China in
some time, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao (
劉建超
) yesterday said:
"There's no need to feel threatened about this."
Apart from the political repercussions, the missile test
represents grotesque carelessness on the part of the Chinese. The wreckage from
the destroyed satellite -- a spray of tiny metallic parts -- has the small but
very real potential to damage other satellites and even the International Space
Station, and for a long period of time.
The U.S. has been joined by Japan, Australia and other countries
in demanding some form of accountability from the Chinese for their
extraordinary behavior, but regardless of how Beijing responds, this incident
demolishes the suggestion that the Chinese military and its Communist Party
bosses can behave in an accountable, let alone responsible, manner in military
and space affairs.
In the wake of the North Korean nuclear test, this missile test
suggests that Beijing has, if anything, taken on Pyongyang has a role model.
The myth of the peaceful rise of China has many subscribers who
romanticize the history of Chinese civilization. What is surprising about the
destruction of the satellite, however, is that the Chinese could so summarily
reduce to myth the idea that it can act as a force for regional peace and
mediation.
In tandem with this, it has become clearer that the Chinese
military is growing more confident and playing the Pentagon for a pack of fools.
It defies common sense that the Chinese could launch this missile without
informing Washington and international scientific organizations beforehand, yet
this is just what appears to have happened.
Liu Jianchao [劉建超], director-general
of the Chinese Foreign Ministry's
Information Department.
----------------------------------------------------
Almost as worrying as the missile test is the fact that the Bush Administration
sat on the news of this development for a week before bringing it to public
attention.
Washington's delay suggests that it has frighteningly little
comprehension of the need for an immediate and unequivocal response -- if not
retaliation -- over Beijing's misuse of space technology and its ramping up of
military tensions in what is already a tense region.
The theory that the Middle East quagmire is compromising the
security interests of the U.S. by giving the Chinese diplomatic room to
maneuver and allowing it to expand its military capabilities with impunity is
gaining currency. Of greatest concern for Taiwan, therefore, is the possibility
that the U.S. government's ability to retaliate against symbolic and technical
advances in China's military capabilities has been dulled.
If they are to be taken seriously in the region, the U.S. State
Department - and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in particular - must
denounce the Chinese launch in the strongest possible terms and prepare a
practical response.
Tongue-clucking and muted expressions of regret from the State
Department will not wash. The Chinese can destroy satellites from ground-based
missiles and they want the world to know it. Beijing must be made to understand
that responsible nations will not tolerate the direction in which it has chosen
to travel.