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China blasts US panel for 'Cold War' thinking
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 21, 2013


China eases control over domestic airspace
Beijing (AFP) Nov 21, 2013 - Private fliers in China will no longer need to get military approval for some flights, the government has said, potentially relaxing its tight grip on the country's airspace.

From next month, most general aviation flights -- which include flight training, private flying and crop-dusting, but not scheduled commercial aviation -- will only need to submit their plans to civil aviation authorities, according to a government document.

But the extent of the relaxation was not fully clear, as the joint statement by the Civil Aviation Administration and the People's Liberation Army general staff headquarters excluded flights in "banned airspace", without providing a definition.

Chinese airspace has to date been controlled by the military and only open to private fliers who pass through a complex approval system. Violators risk fines of 10,000 ($1,631) to 100,000 yuan for taking to the air illegally.

Loosening controls would be expected to boost the growing general aviation market, benefiting a broad range of industry players including private jet makers, navigation device producers and airport equipment manufacturers, the state-run China Securities Journal said Wednesday.

China has an estimated one million dollar millionaires as a result of its economic boom, but is said to have only around 2,000 private aircraft owners, far fewer than countries such as the United States.

China hit back at the US Thursday over a document that called Beijing's growing military a threat to Washington's armed dominance in Asia, accusing its authors of a "Cold War mentality".

China's military spending is soaring and the modernisation of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) "is altering the security balance in the Asia-Pacific, challenging decades of US military preeminence in the region", the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission said in its annual report Wednesday.

Beijing's foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters: "We hope this committee can stop this Cold War mentality and do things that can boost mutual trust between China and the US."

The Washington document said China was "rapidly expanding and diversifying its ability to strike US bases, ships and aircraft" throughout the Asia-Pacific, including areas it could not previously reach, such as the US Pacific territory of Guam.

Quoting the Office of Naval Intelligence, it said that China will probably have 313 to 342 submarines by 2020 -- including around 60 that can fire intercontinental ballistic missiles or cruise missiles against ships.

At a regular briefing, Hong said China's military policy was "defensive in nature" and "within a reasonable range". Its sole purpose, he added, was "protecting our country".

"China has always been an important force for peace and development in the Asia-Pacific," Hong said.

US President Barack Obama has pledged to "pivot" US foreign policy to pay greater attention to Asia in light of the rise of China, which has increasingly tense relations with US allies Japan and the Philippines over territorial disputes.

The commission called on Congress to fund shipbuilding to meet Obama's goal of stationing 60 percent of US warships in the Asia-Pacific by 2020, up from 50 percent.

The clearest symbol so far of China's growing naval capabilities is the country's first aircraft carrier, the refitted Soviet-era vessel Liaoning, which went into service last year.

Song Xue, deputy chief of staff of the PLA navy, said in April that "China will have more than one aircraft carrier".

The US has 11 aircraft carriers, included the recently christened USS Gerald Ford, though the ship remains under construction amid huge cost overruns and delivery has been postponed until February 2016.

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