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        Military buildup most normal

        By Xu Hui and Meng Fanli | China Daily | Updated: 2012-08-01 08:07

        China will stick to the path of peaceful development and remain committed to maintaining peace and stability

        This year is destined to be one of the most important in the history of China's pursuit of peaceful development.

        Internally, the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China will elect a new leadership later this year, and thus inject new vitality into China's reforms.

        Externally, neighboring countries with territorial disputes with China are taking advantage of the United States' strategy of accelerated "return to the Asia-Pacific" to create trouble with China in an attempt to infringe upon China's territorial sovereignty.

        Under the garb of "maintaining regional stability" and "keeping its commitments to allies", the US has increased pressure on China by rearranging its forces deployed abroad, holding joint military exercises with its allies, as well as supplying weapons to regional countries and issuing diplomatic statements. Turning a blind eye to the remarkable economic and political progress China has made over the past years, the US has mobilized its machinery of opinion to overstate various "uncertain factors" in China.

        As a result, China faces numerous internal and external problems, which threaten to end the three-decade-long peace and development momentum in Asia and turn it into the most dangerous region in the world.

        That territorial and maritime disputes among countries in the Asia-Pacific region exist is an indisputable fact. Compared with Europe, Africa and West Asia that have experienced wars and violent conflicts since the end of the Cold War, countries in the Asia-Pacific region have not only managed to appropriately handle their disputes, but also achieved unprecedented peace, prosperity and stability.

        "Shelving disputes for common development", a great strategic concept put forward by Deng Xiaoping, has contributed immensely to the realization of peace and development in Asia-Pacific over the past decades. The region has also benefited from China's reform and opening-up policies and its unremitting efforts to build good cooperative ties with neighboring countries.

        Over the past 30-odd years, East Asian countries have made full use of their geographical adjacency, cultural likeness and similar economic development models to build win-win interdependence. From a long-term perspective, regional countries can continue their development, and find ways to resolve their territorial disputes only by enhancing mutual trust, eliminating their security dilemmas and pushing forward East Asian integration to maintain prosperity and stability in the region.

        Any attempt to force the region's countries to give up their viable development models and instigate them to resolve mutual disputes as soon as possible in defiance of their historical and real conditions will be an irresponsible and impractical act. If such shortsightedness does not change, it could turn Asia-Pacific into another Middle East, a result that would by no means be in the interest of any East Asian country.

        Some countries in the region wrongly assume that a stronger China, thanks to its fast economic development, will try to establish its hegemony. They not only doubt China's commitment to peaceful development, but also see China's development through the tinted glasses of the Cold War.

        In the era of globalization and complex interdependence, coordination and cooperation remain the only way of promoting national development and maintaining national security. China's road of peaceful development is by no means an expedient choice. Instead, it is an inevitable choice that not only serves China's interests, but also the interests of other countries.

        In recent years, some countries have voiced concern over China's normal military buildup and used it as a pretext to doubt Beijing's commitment to peaceful development. They argue that the military buildup will cause it to abandon its previous commitments to resolve disputes with neighbors through peaceful means. Such arguments are made either with ulterior motives or to misinterpret China's history, culture and national defense policy.

        China's military development is aimed at maintaining its sovereignty and territorial integrity and undertaking international responsibilities, not at seeking hegemony.

        Facts prove that improved military capability has not made China prioritize the use of force in its foreign policy. On the contrary, China has never used force against any country in the past three decades. And compared with other permanent UN Security Council members, China has sent more troops to UN peacekeeping missions.

        Recent territorial disputes with neighboring countries have once again made China face some international criticisms and controversies. However, a majority of the world's countries have shown good understanding and supported China's military development and foreign policy.

        Many senior military officers from neighboring countries have praised China's concept of "harmonious world" and "harmonious society" and backed its policy of "non-alignment, non-confrontation and not targeting a third party". They also appreciate Beijing's self-restraint in territorial disputes and believe this to be the key to the stability and development of the Asia-Pacific region over the past three decades.

        In such circumstances, China should ignore the clangor created by certain countries and continue its long-cherished commitment to maintaining peace and prosperity in the Asia-Pacific region.

        Xu Hui is a professor and Meng Fanli a lecturer at the PLA National Defense University.

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