U.S. military's bid to woo China

The_LT

New Member
Registered Member
Mods, if this is in the wrong section, I apologize.
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U.S. military's bid to woo China
Admiral invites PLA commanders to watch exercises

Monday, May 15, 2006; Posted: 12:42 a.m. EDT (04:42 GMT)

SHENYANG, China (AP) -- A top U.S. admiral said Monday he has issued a rare invitation to Chinese commanders to observe a U.S. military exercise next month on Guam in an effort to strengthen ties.

Admiral William Fallon, wrapping up a weeklong visit to China, said he hoped such visits would become part of regular exchanges between the two militaries, which have had little interaction since they broke off following the 2001 collision of a U.S. Navy plane and a Chinese fighter jet.

Fallon said officers from other Asian militaries also were invited to attend the Valiant Shield exercise on the sea near Guam. He said his Chinese hosts reacted positively to the invitation but had not said whether they would attend.

Fallon, a commander of U.S. Pacific forces, said he told Chinese commanders that building a "track record of confidence," would help persuade the U.S. Congress to lift restrictions on military interaction between the two sides.

He said Chinese acceptance of invitations to mix with U.S. and other militaries in the region and exchanges of lower level officers would help build such confidence.

"I believe we need to start moving down this road, and the sooner we do it, the better off we will be," Fallon told reporters in this northeastern Chinese city, the last stop on his trip.

During his four-city tour, Fallon met with Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing, Defense Minster Cao Gangchuan, and regional military commanders.

Fallon said Cao expressed concern about a Pentagon report last year that described China as a potential military threat and said that Beijing hoped that such reports in the future would be "more constructive."

Fallon said he told Cao that officials who wrote that report had less information to work with than they wanted and said he pressed the minister to release more information about China's secretive military.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.
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Found this very interesting. I think it would be awesome to for the PLA to observe in a US Military exercise. Maybe, later on perhaps, they'll participate? As a military member, participating joint exercise with the PLA would be a rewarding experience. In my eyes, by this invitation, the US has, unofficially and not in public, recognized that the Chinese Military is a formidable force to be respected!
 
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renmin

Junior Member
I agree! The US inviting China to see a excercise?! Thats great improvment. This is a great start in improving relations. In the past hte US wanted nothing to do with the PLA and now they are inviting them to a excercise. This is a great change.
 

Player 0

Junior Member
This is actually very surprising, with the anti-China feeling that seems to be strong in the US government you'd think such an idea would be immediately shot down the second it was mentioned.
 

FreeAsia2000

Junior Member
I think this has to do with the lack of agents the americans have in the chinese
armed forces.

It's an attempt to gather information on the future 'movers and shakers'
so they can get a better picture
 

isthvan

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FreeAsia2000 said:
I think this has to do with the lack of agents the americans have in the chinese
armed forces.

It's an attempt to gather information on the future 'movers and shakers'
so they can get a better picture

I believe that US have no problems whit lack of agents in Chinese armed forces… If intelligence gathering is there goal I believe that they joust won’t to see how Chinese use " future 'movers and shakers' "…
US are joust trying to normalize relationships whit China. China can only gain from joint exercises whit US… They have still a lot to learn and US is currently the best teacher they can have.
 

SampanViking

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It sounds as though the US Military appreciates that the PLA is a player and should be engaged (in a constructive sense).

Don't forget, its not surprising that US forces stationed in the Asia Pacific region would want to decrease tension and suspicion. If the situation went belly up, they would be the guys with most to lose.
 

Finn McCool

Captain
Registered Member
Yes Sampan. This isn't the sort of thing they have to get Congresses permission for. So really I think that this idea was started by someone not extremely high up in the Chain of Command. I applaud these exercises, (as long as they don't show the Chinese too much ;)). If there had been events like this during the 1940s, the Cold War would never have happened.

About the intelligence thing, you may be right. The US has notoriously poor human intelligence, and, as far as I know (which isn't much), the US has had extreme difficulty in getting agents into the PLA or CCP. So they might be that desperate.
 

renmin

Junior Member
Finn McCool said:
Yes Sampan. This isn't the sort of thing they have to get Congresses permission for. So really I think that this idea was started by someone not extremely high up in the Chain of Command. I applaud these exercises, (as long as they don't show the Chinese too much ;)). If there had been events like this during the 1940s, the Cold War would never have happened.

About the intelligence thing, you may be right. The US has notoriously poor human intelligence, and, as far as I know (which isn't much), the US has had extreme difficulty in getting agents into the PLA or CCP. So they might be that desperate.
What do you mean "as long as they don't show the Chinese too much"?!
 

The_Zergling

Junior Member
I believe he means as long as the US military does not allow the Chinese to learn more about it than they would have ideally wanted. Which is obviously true of militaries of every country in the world. Transparency isn't exactly a desired virtue in that aspect...
 

chakos

New Member
VIP Professional
It could also be a very nice way of showing the Chinese what to expect if they ever end up in a shooting war. Probably a bit of a carrot and stick approach, normalizing relationships on one hand and also showing them the full power of the US Pacific fleet in case some of the generals back in Beijing where thinking that dealing with the PACFLT would be a relativelly easy thing.
 
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