BEIJING, China
Chinese Defense Minister Dong
Jun said Friday that “negotiation” was the only solution to conflicts such as
the wars in Gaza and Ukraine, as he addressed a global gathering of military
officials in Beijing.Chinese Defense Minister Dong Jun delivers a speech at the opening ceremony of the Beijing Xiangshan Forum in the Chinese capital on September 13, 2024.
Scores of delegates are in
Beijing for the Xiangshan Forum, dubbed China’s answer to the annual Shangri-La
meeting in Singapore.
It is hosting more than 500
representatives from over 90 countries and organizations across three days,
according to state media.
Dong told the opening
ceremony: “To resolve hotspot issues such as the crisis in Ukraine and the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, promoting peace and negotiation is the only way
out.”
“There is no winner in war and
conflict, and confrontation leads nowhere,” Dong said.
“The more acute the conflict,
the more we cannot give up dialogue and consultation. The end of any conflict
is reconciliation,” he added, calling on all countries to promote “peaceful
development and inclusive governance.”
More official speeches are
expected on Friday, and top military representatives from Russia, Pakistan,
Singapore, Iran, Germany and others will participate in roundtable talks.
Topics for discussion at the
forum include US-China relations, security in Europe and Asia, and the
challenges of defense in a multipolar world.
Dong in his speech urged against “the proliferation of national security concepts” to ensure “new technologies can better benefit the whole mankind” — a likely reference to the United States’ efforts to block Beijing’s access to advanced technology.
“At a time of high global
security risks and increased instability and unpredictability, the
responsibility for building the defense and security capacity of all countries
is enormous,” Dong said.
Beijing, he added, “is willing
to work with all parties to strengthen strategic alignment, deepen defense
consultations, discuss the signing of bilateral and multilateral agreements on
defense cooperation.”
US Deputy Assistant Secretary
of Defense Michael Chase is attending the forum, just a few days after top
Washington and Beijing commanders held their first talks.
Washington and Beijing remain
at odds on issues from trade to the status of self-ruled Taiwan and China’s
increasingly assertive approach in disputed maritime regions.
But they have sought to
re-establish regular military-to-military talks in a bid to prevent flashpoint
disputes from spinning out of control.
A key flashpoint is the South
China Sea, where Chinese vessels have engaged in a series of high-profile
confrontations with Philippine ships in recent months.
China claims almost all of the
economically vital body of water despite competing claims from other countries
and an international court ruling that its assertion has no legal basis.
On Thursday, senior military
official Lt. Gen. He Lei told journalists at the forum that China would “crush”
any foreign incursion into its sovereign territory including in the South China
Sea.
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