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USA may lift Chinese arms embargo

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USA may lift Chinese arms embargo

The United States appears ready to lift its 21-year-old arms embargo against China in the wake of President Obama's request on Saturday to ease restrictions on the sale of cargo aircraft to Beijing.

In an Oct 8 letter, Obama called on the House and Senate to lift the ban on C-130 cargo aircraft sales to China, emphasizing "the national interest of the United States" to terminate the suspensions.

Should the proposal pass in both Houses of Congress, this will signal the first time since 1989 that the US has exported arms to China.

Obama stressed in his letter that C-130 cargo aircraft are to be deployed in response to oil spills at sea. However, he did not specify a date or financial cost for an imminent export.

License requirements shall remain in place for these exports, and will require review and approval on an ongoing, case-by-case basis by US government officials.

The C-130 cargo aircraft - also known as the Lockheed C-130 Hercules - is a four-engine turboprop military transport aircraft designed and built in the 1950s. Capable of using unprepared runways for takeoffs and landings, the C-130 was originally designed as a troop, medical evacuation and cargo transport aircraft.

The aircraft have been widely used by NATO and coalition troops on the battlefields of Afghanistan and Iraq. The C-130 has so far been exported to more than 50 countries worldwide.

Washington has exported to China Black Hawk helicopters and other advanced armaments in the 1980s, but has also led Western countries in its restriction of high-tech weapons sales to Beijing since 1989.

It has also threatened to cease cooperation with the European Union, if the latter were to lift its arms sales ban, according to Zhao Xiaozhuo, senior colonel and expert on US military affairs at Beijing-based Academy of Military Science.

"Israel, for example, under the pressure of the US, even had to quit from a contract of selling early warning aircraft to China," said Zhao.

The US, he added, is reluctant to export arms to China out of fears that Beijing's growing military expenditures are making it a fast-evolving threat.

There is also an underlying fear in Washington, Zhao added, that China would simply use the core technologies to its advantage.

Zhai Dequan, the vice-secretary-general of the China Arms Control and Disarmament Association, said that though the C-130 has been put in use for decades of years, it still has been of vast use in various military actions and exercises.

"As a tactical transport, C-130 cargo aircraft serve for middle-ranged deliveries - that is, the distance is within the (battlefield) theater," said Zhao.

"Unlike fighters, a cargo aircraft requires less updated technology and depends more on durability, and the C-130 has been performing quite well in the past decades," said Zhao. "Therefore it is still of operational value in the US."

Analysts said the White House's motives have been fueled by the Obama administration's plan to balance trade with China while testing the waters to further restore strained military-to-military relations.

The US is particularly worried about its trade deficit with Beijing. Moreover, while Washington has been accusing China of using its surplus to create an imbalance in bilateral trade, Beijing has countered that the US government has been banning high-tech American exports to China - and, thus, partly fueling the trade imbalance.

Zhai noted, however, that arms sales are beneficial in boosting related industries and, in doing so, creating job growth.

Beyond that, he added, China has other - and at times more important - reasons to have such hardware at its disposal.

"During the Wenchuan earthquake in 2008, the US ignored China's urgent need for aircraft engines used for rescuing victims," said Zhen. "If it is free trade, then what is the rationale of the US not selling China such conventional and not-so-high-end weapons?"

The other concern is to cast a light on the resumption of stalled military exchanges between the two countries.

Most notably, Beijing had suspended military exchanges altogether in January after the Obama administration unveiled plans to officially sanction the sale of a $6.4 billion military package to Taiwan - an inalienable part of China.

More recently, China has voiced objections to US military exercises with Republic of Korea (ROK) in the Yellow Sea, part of renewed cooperation between Washington and Seoul.

"The US wanted very much to bring the Sino-US military exchange on track - the scheduled meeting between the two countries' defense ministers in Vietnam is clearly a sign of dtente," said Zhai. "Therefore, Obama's proposal can be seen as yet another friendly signal to China."

However "there is more that the US can do," he added. "Apart from the C-130, the US should export more advanced weaponry to China, to fully realize the normalization and transparency of military exchanges."

US may lift Chinese arms embargo
 
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My first personal choice.
 
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After setbacks, US tries to forge military ties with China

HANOI (AFP) – A meeting between US and Chinese defence chiefs in Hanoi on Monday offers Washington a chance to improve fragile relations with Beijing's military and make the case for a more "reliable" dialogue, US officials said on Sunday.
The scheduled talks between Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Chinese Defence Minister Liang Guanglie, on the sidelines of an ASEAN conference, are the first between the countries' top military officials in a year and mark the latest attempt by the United States to forge a security dialogue with Beijing.
China has repeatedly broken off ties with the American military due to unhappiness with US policies, including arms sales to Taiwan, much to the frustration of US officials who argue a more regular dialogue would reduce tensions.
US officials played down expectations for the meeting, saying it was merely one step in a broader, delicate effort that would take time to pay off.
"We view this as a long-term process," Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell told reporters travelling with the defence secretary.
Gates has called on the Chinese to embrace defence exchanges to avoid misunderstandings and "miscalculations," citing the example of the Cold War-era US dialogue with the Soviet military.
Morrell said it was not a matter of Washington pleading with China to pursue military relations but of persuading Beijing that such a step was in its interests and those of the wider region.
"It's about convincing the Chinese that this is of value to them as it is to us," he said.
President Barack Obama's administration faces a difficult challenge as it tries to build trust with China while also defending the US naval presence in the Pacific and reassuring anxious partners in the region who feel threatened by Beijing's more assertive stance.
China has sharply criticized the United States for recent joint military exercises with South Korea in the Yellow Sea, and for sailing naval ships in the South China Sea.
But the US Navy rejects China's claim to territorial rights in those areas and says it will continue to operate in what it considers international waters.
US officials and lawmakers are anxious about China's growing military power, including its investments in submarines and anti-ship missiles that could potentially undercut the role of American aircraft carriers.
A recent Pentagon report to Congress said China appeared to be expanding its strategic goals and planning to extend its navy's reach further into the Pacific.
Underscoring Washington's diplomatic balancing act, Gates is also due to meet Vietnamese leaders during his visit to the capital, as the country has sought US support in territorial disputes with China.
Given the prospects of an intensifying rivalry with China on the high seas, US officials say more military dialogue is crucial to defusing potential crises.
"We hope that we can work with the Chinese to put in place a framework for this military security relationship that will be able to endure friction and turbulence that is inevitable when you have a relationship of the complexity and scope of the US-China bilateral relationship," said a senior defense official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
But he added: "We don't think we're there yet."
The on-again-off-again nature of the relationship had left a cloud of uncertainty over the dialogue, the US official said.
"It's not as simple as hitting the off switch and then coming back nine months later and hitting the on switch and proceeding as if everything is, you know, perfectly fine and good."
Even after China severed military ties in January before restoring relations last month, a telephone "hotline" for the two countries had remained in place, Morrell said.
During his three-day visit for the ASEAN security conference, Gates was also due to meet his defence counterparts from Japan, Australia and the Philippines, officials said.

After setbacks, US tries to forge military ties with China - Yahoo! News
 
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Frankly speaking, it makes no difference at all whether the ban is lifted or not because USA will not sell weapons to China because Americans considers China an enemy. USA also forbids Europe to sell weapons to China and is currently pitting Russians against China with propaganda News such as :

China to conquer world arms market with poor quality rip-offs
China to conquer world arms market with poor quality rip-offs - English pravda.ru
 
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Frankly speaking, it makes no difference at all whether the ban is lifted or not because USA will not sell weapons to China because Americans considers China an enemy. USA also forbids Europe to sell weapons to China and is currently pitting Russians against China with propaganda News such as :

China to conquer world arms market with poor quality rip-offs
China to conquer world arms market with poor quality rip-offs - English pravda.ru

Its getting complicated, really.

Russia resets with U.S., sprints with China | Russia in Foreign Media | RIA Novosti
 
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China should concentrate in Engines

General_Electric_F414_AEDC_93-206711_USAF.jpg


General Electric F414 is an afterburning turbofan engine in the 22,000 lbf (98 kN) thrust class and is produced by GE Aviation. The F414 was developed from GE's highly successful F404 turbofan for use in the Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornet.
 
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That link is to a Russian site - the story is the opinion of the Russian journalist.

USA don't need to pit Russians against China because Russian media is already doing that.

^^^Russia Journalist on Western Payroll



USA pitting Russia against Chinese via media bashing :


There cannot be a hot war between China and the US - RT


How does the United States influence relations between China and Russia? From time to time, Russia gets caught up in the groundless fear of the “Chinese invasion.” Is this part of that influence?

AD: The United States has been quite successful in playing the Chinese card against Russia. Its crude propaganda and subtle diplomacy contain a modicum of truth, and truth, if not covered with flattery and hypocrisy, is always bitter. The United States is distracting the authorities, business and public opinion in Russia from the essence of US-Chinese relations, i.e. “global comprehensive positive cooperation,” which the United States calls the G2. As a result, Russia is seriously thinking of expanding its cooperation with NATO.
 
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