China criticizes new US controls on high-tech exports

(Agencies/chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-06-19 17:23

BEIJING - Beijing on Tuesday criticized new US controls on exports to China of technology with possible military uses, rejecting them as a threat to cooperative relations and efforts to shrink the swollen Chinese trade surplus.

"The Chinese side expresses extraordinary regret and great concern about this," the Commerce Ministry said on its Web site. It said Beijing reserved the right to take unspecified "corresponding measures" in response.

The US rules announced Friday are meant to deny China's military access to technology that might aid its modernization. They impose new end-use controls on goods including lasers, telecommunications equipment and navigation systems.

"The Chinese side believes the US side's insistence on issuing these rules without fully hearing China's opinions is inappropriate, and violates the cooperative spirit," the Commerce Ministry statement said.

The rules "will damage the Chinese side's effort to expand imports from the United States," the statement said. It appealed to Washington to keep in mind the benefits from developing US-Chinese trade in high-tech goods.

The new controls reflect Washington's unease over China's growing military might even as American officials press Beijing to lower barriers to imports of US goods.

The regulations also are intended to make it easier for US companies to sell semiconductors, chemicals and other technology to some Chinese customers that undergo advance screening.

The US Defense Department said last month in a report to Congress that China's military was modernizing in ways that give it options for launching surprise attacks, potentially far from its borders.

But the Chinese Foreign Ministry has said the report "exaggerates China's military strength and expenditure with ulterior motives", and that China is a peace-loving country which sticks to a path of peaceful development and adopts a defensive national defense policy.



Top China News  
Today's Top News  
Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours