China tries
to reassure the world on space missile 'aimed at peace'
Jane
Macartney, Richard Beeston and Tim Reid
The
Times January 20, 2007
Strike raises fear of
Star Wars race
'Soft underbelly' of
US exposed
China signalled
yesterday that its first missile strike against an orbiting
satellite was intended to force the US into talks aimed at
abolishing weapons in space.
As it faced
an international chorus of protest against its test — the
first such launch for 20 years — its officials insisted that
they wanted space to be free of weapons.
“As the Chinese
Government, our principle stand is to promote the peaceful
use of space,” a Foreign Ministry spokesman said. “We oppose
the militarisation of space. In the past, in the present and
in the future, we are opposed to any arms race in space. Of
this everyone can be confident.”
The
reassurances failed to placate jittery Asian neighbours and
Western powers, which fear that the surprise Chinese
muscle-flexing is part of a campaign to raise its global
military posture while raising the spectre of a space arms
race.
China is the
first country since 1985 to destroy a satellite in space and
only the third — after America and the former Soviet Union —
to master so-called Star Wars technology. The clear message
is that if China can shoot down its own orbiter it could
also attack satellites operated by other nations.
Beijing has
increased defence spending by 10 per cent every year since
1990. Last year spending rose nearly 15 per cent to $35.5
billion (£18 billion). Experts believe that the true figure
is far higher, in part because the official budget does not
include military development costs.
Yesterday
Britain and Japan added their voices to the growing
criticism, which has included the US, Australia, South Korea
and Canada. A Downing Street spokesman said that Britain was
concerned about the impact of debris caused by the
destruction of the satellite and the secretive manner in
which the test had been carried out. A formal protest was
made this week to the Chinese by the British Embassy in
Beijing.
Alexander
Downer, the Australian Foreign Minister, said that China’s
new-found capacity to shoot down satellites was “not
consistent with ... the traditional Chinese position of
opposition to the militarisation of outer space”.
Washington’s
response will be crucial in determining what happens next:
an arms race in space or an agreement to limit the use of
Star Wars technology. American analysts said that the test
had exposed the “soft underbelly” of America’s national
security apparatus, because most of the Pentagon’s spy
satellites orbit at a similar height to the weather
satellite destroyed by the Chinese test.
White House
critics said that the Chinese test was a result of President
Bush’s aggressive unilateralism, this time in his space
policy. Last year the US expressly ignored Chinese and
Russian calls for a global ban on the development of space
weapons. Instead, a new policy preserved America’s right to
develop military space technology, while “dissuading”
others.
Edward
Markey, a Democrat congressman, said that President Bush
should initiate an international agreement “to ban the
development, testing and deployment of space weapons and
anti-satellite systems”.
But Jeffrey
Kueter, president of the George C. Marshall Institute, said
that the Chinese move should spur the Bush Administration to
develop new space defence systems.
“We now know
for certain that China has the direct capability to destroy
satellites in space and the indirect capability to deny
their use,” he said.
Chinese
analysts said that they doubted the action would damage
China’s relations with the US. Shi Yinhong, of the School of
International Studies, said: “Every big power, if it wants
to maintain its status as a big power, will get into the
field of space.”