Russia's President Vladimir Putin (R) speaks with Chinese Vice President Li Yuanchao during their bilateral meeting on the sidelines of an economic forum in Saint Petersburg, on May 23, 2014.
Beijing (AFP) - China and Russia will build one of the largest ports in northeast Asia on Russia's Sea of Japan coast, reports said, in a further sign of the powerhouses' growing alliance.
The seaport is expected to be able to handle some 60 million tonnes of cargo a year, China's state-run People's Daily Online reported late Wednesday -- comparable to Britain's busiest port Immingham or Le Havre in France, according to European Commission statistics.
The new facility will be located in far eastern Russia, just 18 kilometres (11 miles) away from the Chinese border. The region is also close to North Korea.
Chinese and Russian leaders inked a deal on the port at May's Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia (CICA) in Shanghai, the report said.
The move represents the latest step by Beijing and Moscow to boost their energy and infrastructure ties.
Resource-hungry China is seeking to diversify its sources of energy amid booming domestic consumption, while Russia -- at odds with the West over its annexation of Ukraine's Crimea peninsula -- is seeking to refocus its gas and oil exports towards Asia.
Last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli attended the groundbreaking of a gas pipeline that will help Russia supply China under a huge energy deal.
After a decade of tough negotiations Chinese and Russian leaders inked a 30-year deal, $400-billion agreement in May that will eventually involve 38 billion cubic metres of gas annually.
"We are today starting the biggest construction project in the world," Putin said at the ceremony outside the Siberian city of Yakutsk.
Zhang said that he hoped the pipeline would be completed within four years.
"China is to devote consistent and unswerving effort to establishing a strategic partnership of energy cooperation with Russia as agreed upon by the heads of state of the two countries," he said, according to China's official Xinhua news agency.
Asia arms up to counter growing Chinese might
In this May 24, 2014 photo, China's Harbin (112) guided missile destroyer takes part in a week-long China-Russia "Joint Sea-2014" navy exercise at the East China Sea off Shanghai, China.
BEIJING (AP) — Vietnam has nearly doubled its military spending, Japan is requesting its biggest-ever defense budget and the Philippines is rushing to piece together a viable navy.
Several Asian nations are arming up, their wary eyes fixed squarely on one country: a resurgent China that's boldly asserting its territorial claims all along the East Asian coast.
The scramble to spend more defense dollars comes amid spats with China over contested reefs and waters. Other Asian countries such as India and South Korea are quickly modernizing their forces, although their disputes with China have stayed largely at the diplomatic level.
This picture taken on September 2, 2014 shows a military instructor (bottom) speaking to university freshmen during a military education and training session on a university campus in Harbin, northeast China's Heilongjiang province.
Asian countries now account for about half of the world's arms imports, with China leading the way by quadrupling its annual military budget over the past decade. The growth in military spending has largely kept pace with economic expansion, although it's been pulling ahead in China, Vietnam and several other countries this year.
China's goal is to dislodge the U.S. as the dominant power in the Pacific, said Robert D. Kaplan, chief geopolitical analyst for the U.S.-based intelligence research firm Stratfor. Among the stakes are vital shipping lanes in the South China Sea and potentially lucrative pockets of oil and natural gas under East Asian waters.
"The Chinese bet is that it can increase its military capacity in the South and East China seas faster than Vietnam and the Philippines can do so," Kaplan said. "If China is able to move freely and exercise more control of its adjacent seas, it will become a full-fledged naval power."
China's recent live-fire military war games in the East and South China sea made its neighbours very nervous.
Beijing hasn't yet caught up to the U.S., which at $665 billion a year, spends more on its military than the next eight countries combined and triple that of China, according to the Stockholm International Peace Institute, a think tank. Still, China's spending nearly equals the total defense budgets of all 24 other countries in East and South Asia.
Drawing the most attention is China's submarine fleet, which is projected to match U.S. numbers by 2020, at 78 vessels each. Many of the Chinese submarines will be stationed at a giant underwater base on Hainan island, which juts into the South China Sea.
China's moves have spurred a submarine shopping spree across Asia. This year, Vietnam received the third of six submarines it ordered from Russia plus maritime patrol aircraft capable of hunting down Chinese subs. Russia is the top military exporter to Asia, followed by the U.S. and then European countries such as the Netherlands.
Over the summer, Vietnamese and Chinese ships rammed each other repeatedly after China moved an oil rig into waters claimed by both countries. Vietnam's military spending expanded by 83 percent over the past five years, making up 8 percent of government spending.
Similarly, Japan is replacing its entire fleet with more modern submarines, South Korea is adding bigger attack submarines and India plans to build six new subs.
"Submarines are seen as a potential for an underdog to cope with a large adversary," said Siemon Wezeman, a senior researcher at the Stockholm institute. "They can move silently and deny aerial or maritime control."
Compared to Vietnam and Japan, the Philippines is lagging behind. After helplessly watching China build atop reefs in the Spratly Islands, which both countries claim, the Philippines welcomed U.S. troops back to its bases after 20 years away. And it plans to boost spending on maritime patrol aircraft, bombers and other hardware.
"The Philippines is doing a lot of work to invest in military modernization," said Jon Grevatt, Asia Pacific defense analyst at the research group IHS Jane's. "For many years its economy has been growing and for many years it hasn't been able to respond to these requirements."
India, which has territorial disputes with both China and Pakistan, has bought so many tanks and jet fighters that it's become the biggest arms importer in the world. India has opened a 100,000-person-strong mountain corps near disputed stretches of its border with China.
Asked by The Associated Press about the regional arms buildup, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Thursday that China's growing military budget was "transparent and serves national defense exclusively."
"If you look closely at the details of the events that happened in the East China Sea and South China Sea over the past two years, you will find that it was not China but the countries you mentioned that created tensions and took provocative actions," Hua said. "We have had to take measures necessary to defend our national sovereignty."
She added, "We hope the relevant countries can look at China's growth with a normal mindset, work with China to develop bilateral relations and preserve peace and stability in Asia."
Despite the focus on marquee hardware, much of the action so far has involved Coast Guard ships that can easily jockey for control of disputed islands and fishing waters.
In June, Japan agreed to donate six Coast Guard vessels to Vietnam, after pledging 10 to the Philippines last year. On its own, Vietnam has nearly doubled its Coast Guard fleet to 68 vessels over the past five years, according to the U.K.-based International Institute for Strategic Studies. And Japan has expanded its main Coast Guard fleet by 41 vessels, for a total of 389 ships.
Japan has used such vessels over the past two years to defend its claims to several uninhabited islands it calls the Senkakus, which the Chinese claim as the Diaoyus.
"Given that all the countries are trying to avoid outright military conflagration, they've been keeping things at the level of paramilitary forces," said Sam Perlo-Freeman, head of the military expenditure program at the Stockholm institute. "They're trying to establish some sort of armed presence without ramping things up to a much more dangerous level."
Japan, however, appears to be preparing itself for possible escalation.
Last month, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government requested his country's biggest-ever military budget — $48 billion — with outlays for P-1 surveillance aircraft, stealth fighters and other U.S.-built hardware.
In July, Abe's Cabinet approved a reinterpretation of the country's constitution allowing it to defend American and other foreign troops under attack. Earlier this month, Japan and India pledged to share defense technologies and hold joint military exercises.
"If China is being more bellicose, it's because they see winds of opportunity," said Bernard Loo Fook Weng, a military studies expert at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore. "This may all step toward a more violent situation."
No comments:
Post a Comment