From the Philippine News Agency (Jun 2):
Stronger US missile defence in Pacific: in words against North Korea, but in fact - China
The United States
proposes to South Korea
to deploy ground-based missile defence systems in the country. Representatives
of South Korea, Japan and the U.S.
discussed these plans at a security conference in Singapore on Saturday. The U.S. mulls seriously South Korea for possible deployment
of a mobile missile defence system used for interception of medium-range
missiles, The Wall Street Journal reported.
The U.S. offers to
deliver to South Korea
ground-based anti-ballistic missile defence systems Terminal High Altitude Area
Defense (THAAD) designed to shoot down medium-range ballistic missiles in their
terminal phase using a hit-to-kill approach.
Contrary to
South Korea,
Japan has been
involved in creation of a missile defence system in the region already for a
long time.
Seoul has not participated in this
programme due to a territorial dispute with
Tokyo
and a factor of historical memory [
Korea
was
Japan’s
colony from 1910 until 1945].
The Pentagon believes that Tokyo
and Seoul should settle their disagreements for
forming a U.S.-Japanese-South Korean tripartite union, some kind of a military
alliance in Asia similar to the North Atlantic
Alliance.
In Europe NATO confronts
Russia,
such alliance in the Asia-Pacific region with other regional countries involved
in it may stand against
China.
Military analysts polled by Itar-Tass believe that declaring protection of
allies in the Asia-Pacific region from a North Korean nuclear threat the
Pentagon is creating a missile defence system in Asia to neutralize Beijing military
potential. In their view, in a speech at U.S. Military Academy West Point on
Wednesday U.S. President Barack Obama has intentionally thrown out a sharp
innuendo not only against Russia, but also China, stating,
“Regional aggression
that goes unchecked - whether in southern Ukraine or the South China Sea, or
anywhere else in the world - will ultimately impact our allies and could draw
in our military.”
“Naturally, the Americans name
Pyongyang’s
nuclear threat as a reason for building up missile defence potential in the
Pacific, but military specialists understand that
China is set as a target.
Beijing steps up
effectively potential of its short-and medium-range missiles against
aircraft-carrying assault forces and the Pentagon felt this danger. Therefore,
U.S. retaliatory measures are predictable no matter how the Americans try to
disguise them under a North Korean threat,” Deputy Director of the Russian
Academy of Sciences (RAS) Institute of U.S. and Canadian Studies Maj Gen Pavel
Zolotarev, former chief of the Information Analytical Centre of the Russian
Defence Ministry, told Itar-Tass.
“The Pentagon already has a radar station in
Japan and is mounting a second
radar there. Now it is advisable for the Americans to have the very missiles
THAAD near guidance systems. If they are deployed in
South
Korea a missile launch area will happen to be closer not
only to
North Korea, but
also
China.
Meanwhile, these are mobile anti-ballistic missile systems which can be
targeted against
Pyongyang and
Beijing depending on the situation,” the
military expert noted.
“
Washington places a larger emphasis on
missile defence development in the Pacific Ocean than in the Euro-Atlantic
region, as 90 percent of information and assault vehicles of
U.S. defensive
force are deployed in the Asia-Pacific region. This takes place amid a changing
strategic balance of forces in the Asia-Pacific region where Chinese fleet is
growing massively.
In the total number of combat units Chinese naval forces are
already ranked second in the world after the U.S. Chinese shipbuilding
programme is the most large-scale one in the world and surpasses U.S. programme
[expect for aircraft carriers] and other NATO states. Meanwhile, China invests
major resources in build-up of its strategic triad - aviation, intercontinental
ballistic missiles and missile-carrying nuclear submarines, particularly a
naval component of this triad,” Director of the RAS Centre of International
Security Aleksey Arbatov told Itar-Tass.
“An American missile defence system officially being stationed in Asia is
targeted against North Korea which had made a test-launch of a ballistic
missile over Japan in 2012 and had conducted a third nuclear weapon test in
2013, stirring up one more acute crisis and was probably preparing a fourth
military nuclear test. However, further growth of U.S. military presence in
Northeast Asia will be excessive to rebuff North Korean missiles and cannot
have any other goal but to hamper an increase of Chinese nuclear deterrence
potential,” the analyst said.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry has described U.S.
plans to deploy missile defence systems in the region in diplomatic way typical
for China,
noting that this factor would not promote maintenance of stability and
strategic balance of forces in the Asia-Pacific region.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=&sid=&nid=&rid=649249
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