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Beijing needs to build defensive structures on South China Sea islands: Army general

This image grab shows Chinese dredging vessels in the waters in the disputed Nansha Islands, known as Spratly Islands by China's rivals, in the South China Sea.

A leading Chinese military general says his country needs to build defensive structures on artificial islands in the South China Sea to assert its sovereignty over nearly the entire region amid tensions between Beijing and Washington.

The vice president of China's Academy of Military Sciences, Lt. Gen. He Lei, said during a rare meeting with Chinese and foreign journalists on Thursday that Beijing needed to protect its sovereignty over virtually the entire crucial waterway.

"I don't think any country would want to make irresponsible comments about such matters," media outlets quoted the general as saying.

The general, however, declined to comment on aircraft deployments on artificial islands China has built in the area, saying those were entirely China's domestic affairs.

Earlier in the day, Foreign Minister Wang Yi blamed the United States and its allies for stirring up trouble in the South China Sea.

"Some outside forces are not happy with the prevailing calm, and try to stir up trouble and muddle the waters. Their frequent show of force with fully armed aircraft and naval vessels is the most destabilizing factor in the region," Wang said.

He also stated that China had been working its Southeast Asian neighbors on completing a code of conduct to prevent frictions in the waterway.

Beijing has, on different occasions, asserted its sovereignty over nearly all of the South China Sea, which serves as a crossing for more $5 trillion worth of maritime trade annually. The sea is also claimed in part by the Philippines, Brunei, Vietnam, Malaysia and Taiwan.

The US has been taking sides with several of China’s neighboring countries in their territorial disputes in the busy sea. The US has also accused China of implementing what it calls a land reclamation program in the South China Sea by building artificial islands in the disputed areas.

The US has long sought to limit China’s growing maritime influence in the sea.

However, Beijing has maintained that Washington meddles in the issues of the region. Additionally, China does not look favorably on the US military’s presence in the region, saying Washington is only there to foment regional tensions. China has also repeatedly warned the US against naval patrols in the South China Sea.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the Chinese general defended China's 8.1 percent increase in its defense budget announced Monday, which brings it to a record $173 billion, the world's second largest.

China this year is spending 1.25 percent of its GDP and 5.2 percent of the total government budget on the armed forces, considerably lower than the US military budget, He said.

"So really, an increase of 8.1 percent is still pretty low," the general added.

Chinese state media also said on Tuesday that the 8.1-percent rise in the country’s defense budget was neither a huge percentage of the whole budget nor a sharp increase compared to the 2016 or 2017 defense budgets.

“China’s defense budget is neither the largest in size — it accounts for just one-fourth of the military spending of the United States — nor does it have the fastest growth rate,” the daily said in an editorial.

The English-language newspaper added that even if the Chinese defense budget was “calculated in per capita terms, China’s military lags well behind other major countries.”


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