China is prepared to use nuclear weapons
against the US if it is attacked by Washington during
a confrontation over Taiwan, a Chinese general said
on Thursday.
If the Americans draw their missiles
and position-guided ammunition on to the target zone
on China's territory, I think we will have to respond
with nuclear weapons, said General Zhu Chenghu.
Gen Zhu was speaking at a function for
foreign journalists organised, in part, by the Chinese
government. He added that China's definition of its
territory included warships and aircraft.
If the Americans are determined
to interfere [then] we will be determined to respond,
said Gen Zhu, who is also a professor at China's National
Defence University.
We . . . will prepare ourselves
for the destruction of all of the cities east of Xian.
Of course the Americans will have to be prepared that
hundreds . . . of cities will be destroyed by the Chinese.
Gen Zhu is a self-acknowledged hawk
who has warned that China could strike the US with long-range
missiles. But his threat to use nuclear weapons in a
conflict over Taiwan is the most specific by a senior
Chinese official in nearly a decade.
However, some US-based China experts
cautioned that Gen Zhu probably did not represent the
mainstream People's Liberation Army view.
He is running way beyond his brief
on what China might do in relation to the US if push
comes to shove, said one expert with knowledge
of Gen Zhu. Nobody who is cleared for information
on Chinese war scenarios is going to talk like this,
he added.
Gen Zhu's comments come as the Pentagon
prepares to brief Congress next Monday on its annual
report on the Chinese military, which is expected to
take a harder line than previous years. They are also
likely to fuel the mounting anti-China sentiment on
Capitol Hill.
In recent months, a string of US officials,
including Donald Rumsfeld, defence secretary, have raised
concerns about China's military rise. The Pentagon on
Thursday declined to comment on hypothetical scenarios.
Rick Fisher, a former senior US congressional
official and an authority on the Chinese military, said
the specific nature of the threat is a new addition
to China's public discourse. China's official
doctrine has called for no first use of nuclear weapons
since its first atomic test in 1964. But Gen Zhu is
not the first Chinese official to refer to the possibility
of using such weapons first in a conflict over Taiwan.
Chas Freeman, a former US assistant
secretary of defence, said in 1996 that a PLA official
had told him China could respond in kind to a nuclear
strike by the US in the event of a conflict with Taiwan.
The official is believed to have been Xiong Guangkai,
now the PLA's deputy chief of general staff.
Gen Zhu said his views did not represent
official Chinese policy and he did not anticipate war
with the US.
Additional reporting by Richard McGregor
in Beijing
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