Commentary: China's military spending growth rational, no room for "China threat" cliche
Xinhua, March 5, 2016 Adjust font size:
China's plan to raise its defense budget this year by a six-year low rate of 7.6 percent is yet another rational move in favor of economic development in the country, which leaves no room for the "China threat" cliche hyped up by certain Western powers.
It is remarkable that China, the third largest country by land size, is defending the world's largest population with only 6 percent of what the United States spends on defense per capita. Nevertheless, Western media are criticizing the increase in China's defense budget with groundless charges.
The fact is, even with the lowest increase since 2010, China's military budget is still less than one third of that of the United States, which dwarfs the combination of all eight other countries ranking after it in terms of defense spending.
The criticism is simply a calculated ballyhoo directed by the West to defame China and to portray China as a simmering threat which it needs as an excuse to contain with a larger military budget.
Should the West take off its tinted spectacles, it could easily find that the uptick is just a normal and rational budget adjustment for a country that pursues a defensive national defense policy, and that has a land larger than the United States and territorial waters much larger than Mexico in size to defend.
The justification of the rise hinges on three points.
First, defending one's own territory with a proper budget is a sacred right endowed by the international law to all countries, not excluding China. Therefore raising budget according to defense needs is purely part of China's internal affairs. By throwing bricks from the outside, the West is actually meddling in China's internal affairs.
Second, thanks to the Western arms embargo against China, Beijing has no choice but relying mostly on itself to carry out its defense modernization from scratch, which surely requires relatively high military spending. However, even after the increase, the budget is still only about 1.5 percent of China's GDP, which is lower than the average level of 2.6 percent worldwide. The rate in the United States is 4 percent.
Third, with increasing intrusion of war ships and planes into China's territorial waters and space, the United States and some of its allies are continuously challenging China's bottom line in the name of "freedom of navigation". China cannot fend off these challenges merely with sampans and telescopes. Its armed forces, which have never incited war with anyone, need to be modernized with a reasonable military budget growth.
For all that, the rise of China's defense budget is moderate in nature, and anyone badmouthing it is actually selling something, either the "China threat" cliche or the illusory Chinese hegemony.
The defaming campaign targeting China clearly shows that Washington and some of its allies are taking a dangerous isolationist approach on the issue of China's development. By depicting China as a hegemony seeker, the incumbent juggernaut is playing a game of thief crying "Stop thief".
It is highly advised that Western powers, particularly the United States, expand their strategic horizon and contemplate the promising future with Sino-West cooperation instead of confrontation. That is a mission neither sides can afford to lose. Endi