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China Opposed to US Sales of "Maverick" Missiles to Taiwan: Spokesman (09-07 9:20)
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日期:
2001-09-07 10:14
編輯:
system
來源:
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China is firmly opposed to the United States' plan of selling Maverick missiles to Taiwan, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said at a press conference Thursday.
Spokesman Zhu Bangzao made the remark when asked to comment on the statement by the US Department of Defense on September 5 that the United States may sell 40 Maverick missiles to Taiwan to arm its F-16 fighter jets.
Zhu said that China is seriously concerned about this. Such an act by the United States would send a wrong signal to the Taiwan authorities and constitute a gross interference in China's internal affairs. China is firmly opposed to this, he said.
Zhu said that the three Sino-US Joint Communiques are the basis for Sino-US relations, and US arms sales to Taiwan will once again violate the three joint communiques, especially the one issued on August 17, 1982, and the relevant commitments the US side has made.
China demands the United States realize the harm of arms sales to Taiwan, adhere to the "one China" policy, the three Sino-US Joint Communiques and relevant commitments, stop arms sales to Taiwan so as to avoid harming the cross-straits relations and Sino-US relations, Zhu said.
Zhu said that US arms sales to Taiwan would be an encouragement to the island's forces for "independence," will certainly have a negative impact on the stability of the Taiwan Straits. It is not in the interests of the development of the cross-straits situation, the Sino-US relations and not in the interests of the United States, the spokesman said.
The AGM-65 Maverick is a tactical, air-to-surface guided missile designed for close air support, interdiction and defense suppression mission. It provides stand-off capability and high probability of strike against a wide range of tactical targets, including armor, air defenses, ships, transportation equipment and fuel storage facilities. Maverick was used during Operation Desert Storm and, according to the Air Force, hit 85 percent of its targets.
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