By Chris Buckley
BEIJING, Jan 22 (Reuters) Blasting a satellite out of the heavens may have been China's blunt way of demanding a bigger say in space security, Chinese experts said today, while voicing puzzlement about the apparent test and Beijing's long silence.
Chinese arms control specialists with military backgrounds told Reuters they did not know that China had indeed fired an anti-satellite missile on January 11 in what Washington last week called an alarming escalation of military rivalry in space.
Xia Liping, a People's Liberation Army (PLA) officer and professor at the Shanghai Institute for International Strategic Studies, said Beijing did not want an arms race in space. But the reported test might have been intended to push Washington towards international talks aimed at preventing a race, he suggested.
''The weaponisation of space would be very dangerous; it could lead to a new arms race,'' said Xia, who stressed he had no firm knowledge of any test. ''I would say, though, that in the history of arms control the rule is that the United States is willing to ban a military capability only when other countries possess it.'' The Bush administration has announced plans to maintain U S dominance of outer space and prevent other states from threatening its satellites, vital nerves of commerce and security.
Recent textbooks and speeches show that Chinese diplomats and military officers are worried that the US push is leaving China lagging and vulnerable.
''The militarisation of space will also become the focus of all military great powers' national security and development strategy,'' states a 2006 textbook on space weapons written by officers from China's Second Artillery Battalion, which wields the country's nuclear arsenal. ''The flames and smoke of war will rise in a new battlefield -- space.'' Chinese military writings also leave no doubt that the PLA has been studying how to counter U.S. plans, according to a compilation issued last week by Michael Pillsbury, a researcher close to the Pentagon.
''There is an active group in China not only advocating the weaponisation of space but also putting forward specific proposals for implementation of a Chinese space-based weapons programme,'' Pillsbury wrote in the study for Congress' US-China Economic and Security Review Commission.
But China lags far behind the United States in space technology and does not want to divert its civilian space resources to military uses, said Teng Jianqun, a former PLA officer who now studies space policy at the China Arms Control and Disarmament Association, a government-run think tank.
''China has constantly feared that the U S is moving forward with space weaponisation, but China does not want to follow the United States into this,'' said Teng, who said he was sceptical about the reported test.
''We need to sit down and work out the rules of the game to prevent this trend taking on a life of its own.'' When two US analysts, one a former adviser to the Clinton White House, visited Beijing in November, their Chinese counterparts warned of rising alarm about U.S. space weapons.
''They warned that China would respond with countermeasures if the US continued to refuse negotiations on these weapons,'' the analysts, Bruce MacDonald and Charles Ferguson, wrote in the Christian Science Monitor on Monday.
But if the January 11 blast was intended to wake up Washington and push for negotiations, the Chinese Foreign Ministry's silence about the claim is ''baffling'', said Xu Guangyu, an ex-PLA officer at the China Arms Control and Disarmament Association.
Chinese diplomats have yet to explain or deny the satellite test, even in private, the New York Times reported today citing senior Washington officials.
''I don't know whether the American reports about the satellite are true. It's odd and abnormal that they haven't said anything,'' Xu said of China's diplomats.
''If
it
is
a
negotiating
chip,
it's
illogical
not
to
come
out
and
announce
something.
But
a
side-effect
may
be
that
it
makes
us
sit
down
together
and
talk.''
REUTERS
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