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NewsAugust 7, 2019

BEIJING -- China said Tuesday it "will not stand idly by" and will take countermeasures if the U.S. deploys intermediate-range missiles in the Asia-Pacific region, which Washington has said it plans to do within months. The statement from the director of the foreign ministry's Arms Control Department, Fu Cong, follows the U.S.'s withdrawal last week from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, a move Fu said would have a "direct negative impact on the global strategic stability" as well as security in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region.. ...

By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN ~ Associated Press
Director of the foreign ministry's Arms Control Department, Fu Cong speaks during a press conference at the Ministry of Foreign Affair building in Beijing, Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2019. China said Tuesday it  will not stand idly by  and will take countermeasures if the U.S. deploys intermediate-range missiles in the Indo-Pacific region, which it plans to do within months. (AP Photo/Christopher Bodeen)
Director of the foreign ministry's Arms Control Department, Fu Cong speaks during a press conference at the Ministry of Foreign Affair building in Beijing, Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2019. China said Tuesday it will not stand idly by and will take countermeasures if the U.S. deploys intermediate-range missiles in the Indo-Pacific region, which it plans to do within months. (AP Photo/Christopher Bodeen)

BEIJING -- China said Tuesday it "will not stand idly by" and will take countermeasures if the U.S. deploys intermediate-range missiles in the Asia-Pacific region, which Washington has said it plans to do within months.

The statement from the director of the foreign ministry's Arms Control Department, Fu Cong, follows the U.S.'s withdrawal last week from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, a move Fu said would have a "direct negative impact on the global strategic stability" as well as security in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region.

Fu said China was particularly concerned about announced plans to develop and test a land-based intermediate-range missile in the Asia-Pacific "sooner rather than later," in the words of one U.S. official.

"China will not stand idly by and be forced to take countermeasures should the U.S. deploy intermediate-range ground-based missiles this part of the world," Fu told reporters at a specially called briefing.

He also advised other nations, particularly South Korea, Japan and Australia, to "exercise prudence" and not allow the U.S. to deploy such weapons on their territory, saying such a move would "not serve the national security interests of these countries."

U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said in Asia over the weekend he wanted to deploy midrange conventional missiles in the Asia-Pacific within months. Australian officials said Monday the locations for the bases have not been disclosed but their country would not be one of them.

But speaking to reporters traveling with him to Tokyo on Tuesday, Esper said it would take "a few years" to achieve initial operation of missiles in the region.

"I have never asked anybody about the deployment of missiles in Asia," he said when asked about his meetings in Australia and New Zealand. "I never asked, they never declined. We are quite some ways away from that."

Asked about potential locations, he said there will be a lot of dialogue between the Pentagon, area military commanders and allies.

Fu also said China had no intention of joining nuclear weapons reduction talks with the U.S. and Russia, pointing to the huge gap in the size of China's arsenal compared to those of the other two. China has an estimated 290 nuclear warheads deployed, compared to 1,600 for Russia and 1,750 for the U.S., according to the Federation of American Scientists.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has called for urgent arms control talks to prevent a chaotic arms race following the treaty's demise. He also said Monday that Russia would only deploy new intermediate-range missiles if the U.S. does.

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China has already shown "maximum restraint" in developing its arsenal and stuck to its policy it would not be the first to use a nuclear weapon in a conflict, Fu said.

"I don't think it is reasonable or even fair to expect China to participate in an arms reduction negotiation at this stage," Fu said. He added China remained committed to multilateral efforts to reduce nuclear stockpiles, such as the U.N.'s Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, although it has yet to ratify the agreement.

Fu wouldn't elaborate on what countermeasures China was considering taking against the U.S., saying only "everything is on the table," although he did say China has never and would never take part in a nuclear arms race.

Nor would he say how China might retaliate against countries hosting U.S. land-based intermediate-range missiles, although China has in past used economic means to retaliate against South Korea over its deployment of a U.S. anti-missile defense system.

Fu dismissed U.S. arguments for leaving the treaty as "pure pretext," saying Washington was merely looking for an excuse to develop new weapons. If Washington truly believes Russia is cheating on the treaty, as it says, the way forward is to negotiate rather than withdraw, Fu said.

Meanwhile, Washington's argument it is threatened by China because 80 percent or more of Chinese missiles fall into the intermediate-range category doesn't hold up, since those missiles would be unable to reach the continental U.S.

"So the U.S. would be the least to worry if that is the case," Fu said. "That shows that all of this is nothing but a pretext."

Fu's emphasis on the continental U.S. could serve to imply the U.S. has no legitimate security interests in Asia, and Washington's only worry should be protecting the homeland -- something President Donald Trump may be inclined to agree with, said Sam Roggeveen, director of the International Security Program at Australia's Lowy Institute.

Beijing may also be saying a U.S. intermediate-range missile attack on mainland China could trigger a Chinese retaliatory strike on the continental U.S., Roggeveen said.

"It implies that the ability of either side to hit the other's homeland is a threshold or a taboo," he said.

Defense analysts have long said China's large arsenal of land-based intermediate-range missiles are intended primarily to degrade Taiwan's defenses, target Guam and other key U.S. bases in the region and deny access to the area by the U.S. Navy.

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