13 July 2000
Cohen Speech to Chinese National Defense University
Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen discussed the importance of
mutual understanding and direct communication between the United
States and China in a July 13 speech to the Chinese National Defense
University.
"The United States is deeply engaged and involved in the Asian Pacific
region," Cohen said, "because we recognize its strategic importance
and its growing promise and prosperity in the new century."
U.S. alliances with Japan, the Republic of Korea, Australia, Thailand
and the Philippines contribute to "stability and peace for all of the
nations in this region, including China," Cohen said.
The United States and China have many common interests, such as
ensuring a nuclear-free Korean peninsula, guaranteeing peaceful
resolution of regional disputes, developing Asian economic prosperity,
and preventing the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and
other transnational threats, Cohen told students.
"One of the areas where we clearly have a difference is around the
subject of a National Missile Defense System," the Defense Secretary
said. He explained that the United States would only deploy the
potential system to guard against a limited number of missiles from
isolated rogue nations or terrorists.
"It is designed to enhance peace and stability, not to threaten the
security of any nation," Cohen said.
Following is the text of Cohen's remarks, as delivered:
Address to the Chinese National Defense University
As Delivered by Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen
The National Defense University, Beijing, China
Thursday, July 13, 2000
Thank you very much, President [of the National Defense University]
Xing [Shizong]. It is a pleasure for me to return to China with my
last visit having occurred back in last January of [1998]. On that
trip, I had the occasion to address the Academy of Military Science in
Beijing and had a meeting with President Jiang [Zemin] and Minister of
National Defense [General] Chi [Hoatian]. I noticed as I walked into
the reception room that there was a quote [which was], I believe,
taken from Confucius which said it is a great joy to receive a friend
from afar. I would like for you to think that I am a friend from afar.
Since my last visit, we have witnessed a time of swiftly moving global
events, much of it with direct consequences for the ties between China
and the United States. Indeed, the past two years have been a time of
both strain and success for the relationship between our two nations.
As we get back on course, we need to understand each other better and
to improve communications, and this is one of the reasons I wanted to
be here and talk directly to you this morning.
I'd like to take this opportunity to discuss U.S. policy goals in the
world generally and, more specifically, in Asia. The United States
seeks to be actively engaged in world events and world affairs,
working with nations in every region to promote peace and stability
and to advance the cause of personal economic freedom and security.
Indeed, we live [engaged] in the world politically, economically, and
militarily because our interests and ideals are dependent on the
success and security and the prosperity of other nations.
For the United States, we see this course of engagement as not only
being in our national interest but also in the interests of other
countries as well. Our strategy for achieving peace and stability is
reflected in our overall national security strategy. We want to shape
a stable and secure international environment. We need to be able to
respond to threats and crises, whether they are destabilizing local
conflicts, such as those in East Timor, or humanitarian support, such
as in Central America. We want to prepare for the future as well by
investing in our forces and the technology they will require.
The United States is deeply engaged and involved in the Asian Pacific
region because we recognize its strategic importance and its growing
promise and prosperity in the new century. A tremendous amount of U.S.
trade is conducted with many nations in the region, and our future is
linked with Asia across the Pacific just as surely as it is linked
with Europe across the Atlantic. Our strategy of engagement in the
Asian Pacific region itself remains grounded in our alliances with
Japan, Republic of Korea, Australia, Thailand, the Philippines; our
engagement in multilateral institutions like the ASEAN [Association of
Southeast Asian Nations] Regional Forum; our forward military
presence; and our active engagement with China.
Both of our nations have an interest in an Asia that is strategically
secure and stable, where trade and investment and economic development
can flourish. Both of our nations have an interest in a peaceful and
nuclear-free Korean Peninsula. Both of our nations have an interest in
the peaceful resolution of regional disputes. Both of our nations have
an interest in confronting transnational threats, such as
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, terrorism, drug
trafficking, and environmental degradation.
Today, the United States and China can point to many areas were we
have recognized our common interests and have successfully worked
together for the benefit of the region and other parts of the world.
Economically, we have worked together to help calm the turbulent
economic seas that still churned around this region during my last
visit, and we have worked together to further strengthen our trade
relations through the PNTR [Permanent Normal Trade Relations with the
United States] and Chinese membership in the World Trade Organization.
Most recently, as many of you probably know, the House of
Representatives in Washington embraced closer economic ties between
the United States and China, calling for freer and fairer trade and
greater openness between our nations. I am confident that the Senate
will also approve this major step forward in our relations. I have met
and talked with more than a dozen Members of Congress to ask them to
support Permanent Normal Trade Relations, and tomorrow, I will be
giving a speech at the Shanghai Stock Exchange discussing the
importance of PNTR.
Diplomatically, in addition to our efforts with regard to Korea, we
have worked together to control the spread of dangerous weapons of
mass destruction, notably, with regard to forging an international
consensus and a common strategy for pulling India and Pakistan [back
from nuclear confrontation]. As our overall relations develop, our two
nations can point to many areas where our military relations can
develop as well.
When I last visited Beijing, our military-to-military relationship was
starting to grow. We had initiated a strategic dialogue between our
two ministries. The military commanders were consulting both directly
here and in the United States. Our navies had conducted reciprocal
ship visits. We had agreed to share information on humanitarian
exercises. American forces were proud to offer humanitarian assistance
during the tragic earthquakes that occurred in Hebei Province [before]
my last visit. And during my visit here I became, I have been told,
the first Western leader to visit your Air Defense Command Center in
the Beijing region. And we also signed a Military Maritime Consultant
Agreement to help avoid incidents at sea and to create a venue for
dialogue between our respective navies.
This past January, I am very pleased to say that we reestablished our
military-to-military cooperation at our talks in Washington. I return
to China as part of our mutual effort to continue that process, a
deliberate paced and balanced program that builds confidence and
understanding. As a result, we can look forward to Defense
Consultative Talks here in September and reciprocal ship visits,
including a U.S. Navy ship in Qingdao and a Chinese Navy ship coming
to both Hawaii and Seattle. Finally, I have just invited the Director
of the PLA [People's Liberation Army], General Political Department
General Yu Yang Bo, to the United States this year, and I have
extended another invitation to Ministry Chi to come to Washington next
year to meet with my successor.
As I said during my 1998 visit, we see a three-fold approach to our
military cooperation: deepening our current joint efforts, modestly
broadening them into new areas, and advancing from confidence-building
to real world cooperation. [We want to create] a relationship, not of
distrust, but one of dialogue and above all, one that does not
endanger but enhances the security of all of our citizens, our allies,
and our friends in the region.
This in turn illustrates a fundamental fact about our relationship
with China. The United States cooperates with China not only because
China is a great and growing nation. We cooperate with China because
we have a great interest in doing so.
Both President Clinton and I have stated on a number of occasions to
those who would seek somehow to, quote, contain China, [unquote] --
those in America who advocate such a policy -- that they advocate a
policy of both folly and futility. We do not seek to contain the most
populous nation on earth. In fact, it is in our interest to cooperate
with you. China has a strong and growing economy, and it is
increasingly a part of the open global market. It is a permanent
member of the United Nations Security Council. It is a member of more
that 1,000 international organizations. It would not be in our
interest to try to contain a nation that has the potential to offer so
much to this region and to the world.
Across the Asian Pacific region, our alliances focus on preserving
stability in Asia. The U.S.-Japan security alliance has been and
remains a foundation for peace and stability in the region, and under
our new guidelines for new defense cooperation, the United States and
Japan are actively improving our ability to provide peacekeeping
support, humanitarian relief, respond to regional crises, and
integrate our security structures. As I pointed out two years ago, it
is a defensive alliance that does not isolate or threaten anyone in
the region. On the contrary, like all of our regional alliances and
partnerships, it is designed to expand stability for the benefit of
all nations.
America's alliance with the Republic of Korea remains a key factor on
the Korean Peninsula and, hence, for peace throughout the region. Both
the United States and China can be justifiably proud of our role in
supporting the efforts of leaders of both North and South to take
steps to bring their nations together, and our cooperation is helping
to bridge the bitter divide of the past half-century with an
indispensable element in the success of the recent summit in
Pyongyang. And I think that the recent summit demonstrated not only
the desire on the part of the Korean people for peace but the value of
U.S.-China cooperation to the peace and stability of the Asian Pacific
Region. Now, the path to permanent peace on the peninsula is likely to
be a long one. We must remain vigilant even as we are open to change,
and there are grounds for hope that the fifty-year confrontation in
Korea may be ended if the promise of the summit is finally realized.
Let me try to summarize quickly that we have relations with Australia,
an alliance with Thailand and a security relationship and ties with
the Philippines, all of which are helping to ensure stability and
peace for all of the nations in this region, including China.
And we should face very clearly and up front as great nations that we
still, nonetheless, have differences of philosophy and opinion. Some
of these differences are very important, and we need to address them
through open dialogue. But in the effort to deal with these
differences, I think that we can build upon a foundation of important
common interest.
One of the areas where we clearly have a difference is around the
subject of a National Missile Defense System. I'd like to take just a
moment to just explain our perspective. The global spread of dangerous
technologies -- chemical, nuclear, biological agents, and the missiles
to delivery them -- constitutes a great and growing threat to all
nations of the world.
Neither the United States, nor China, nor Russia for that matter, can
know with certainty what terrorist groups or rogue nations may
threaten us with these weapons in the future. As long as these weapons
of mass destruction continue to spread in ever widening circles, that
threat will continue to exist. And that's why we must also work
vigorously to stop the spread of weapons technology, to deter its use,
and to work to develop a system to defend against a limited ballistic
missile attack from an irresponsible nation.
Let me be as clear I can, as I was with our Russian friends. I met
recently with President
[Vladimir] Putin in Russia and pointed out that our administration is
strongly committed to maintaining the ABM Treaty [Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty] as a cornerstone of strategic stability. Doing so is
entirely consistent with updating the treaty to permit limited
defenses, while ensuring continued stable deterrence. Such a system
would not be designed to address China's missile capability, but its
purpose, if the United States decides to deploy it--and the President
has made no such decision at this point--would be to stop a limited
number of missiles from isolated dangerous nations and terrorists. It
is designed to enhance peace and stability, not to threaten the
security of any nation.
I know there are calls from time to time to say that the United States
should simply remove its presence from the Asian Pacific region, but I
would ask you to consider who would fill the vacuum under those
circumstances. Would it be China? Would it be Japan? Would be it be
India? Would it be Pakistan? Who would rush to fill the vacuum that
would be left by the United States, which has done so much to preserve
stability and therefore, allow investment to flow into the Asian
Pacific Region and to benefit China specifically?
I met with Deng Xiao Ping back in 1978, and, at that time, he talked
about his four modernizations. As a result of the presence of the
United States as a stabilizing force for the Asian Pacific region,
China has been able to pursue its four modernizations. China has been
able to move from the 20th Century now into the 21st Century as a
burgeoning economy. And so our presence here has been very beneficial,
and we want you to consider that as we move forward to work with you
in a cooperative way to continue to promote that stability, that
peace, and indeed the prosperity.
As you may have gathered, Taiwan is very much a subject of discussion
during my visit. The United States is committed to the One-China
policy and the Three Communiqu��. We are also committed to the Taiwan
Relations Act, and we believe the reconciliation must occur through
peaceful dialogue and not through any military action. We are
committed to try to find ways in which that can be achieved. I
believe, and the President believes, that the newly elected President
Chen Shuibian is looking for ways in which to establish a
reconciliation and that hopefully a way can be found. But it must be
found through peaceful means and not through military action. We
recognize how sensitive an issue this is for China and how
passionately you feel about it, but we are convinced that ways can be
found to achieve your goal through peaceful means.
I would like to shorten my presentation to say something that is very
important to me. Too often we tend to talk to each other or
communicate over long distances and we do it through a media that at
many times presents the United States in a way that is not only
unhelpful, but is untrue. The characterizations of the United States
as being a hegemon, as a country determined to dominate the world and
to contain and dominate China are simply untrue. Yet, we see constant
references such as this appearing in the Chinese media, which only
provokes a negative reaction on the part of many in my own country. We
have an absolute obligation to deal with you directly, honestly, and
candidly. That is precisely the reason why I wanted to come to you
today, to discuss this in this forum so that we could raise the issues
without any filters of either hyperbole or criticism or negativity
that, too often, characterize the nature of the U.S. position and
policies.
Let me conclude with a quote taken from Lao-tze, who once said that
what is firmly established cannot be uprooted, what is firmly grasped
cannot slip away, it will be honored from generation to generation.
The United States believes, and we hope that China believes, that
working together we can firmly establish bonds that will not slip
away, bonds that will be honored from generation to generation to the
benefit of both our nations and, indeed, the entire Asia Pacific
region. Thank you.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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