BEIJING - China will consider sending combat troops overseas at the request of the United Nations, an officer from the Ministry of National Defense said on Tuesday.
But the UN has so far not made any such request to China, Tao said.
He added that China has to be extremely cautious about the issue.
"We will have to take into account our national defense policy, which is defensive in nature, the international community's response, as well as our troops' capability," he said.
Tao was responding to a question by a US marine attach concerning China's peacekeeping missions. Thirty-eight military attachs from 36 countries residing in China visited the ministry's Peacekeeping Center on Tuesday.
While it is uncommon for a defense ministry officer to speak about sending combat troops overseas, it is not the first time such an issue has been raised.
Senior Colonel Wei Yanwei, deputy director of the ministry's peacekeeping affairs office, made similar remarks last November during an international forum on peacekeeping hosted by the ministry.
Peacekeeping troops sent by China on UN missions are mostly engaged in engineering, medical, transportation and logistics work.
A number of analysts said they saw no need for the country to expand its current peacekeeping responsibilities.
The areas currently in need of peacekeeping are suffering from turmoil at the local level without any serious conflict involved, Beijing-based military strategist Peng Guangqian told China Daily.
"Even if China sends combat troops it won't be of much use, because engineering and medical aid are what the locals need most," Peng said.
Peng said three conditions have to be taken into consideration before China sends its combat troops overseas - a UN request, the real situation in the destination country or region, and the ability of the Chinese military.
China has been consistent in fulfilling its international peacekeeping obligation in an active and responsible manner, Peng said.
"Unlike some Western countries, China does not take advantage of peacekeeping to push national interests in other countries," he said.
Major General Jin Yinan at the People's Liberation Army's University of National Defense told China National Radio earlier that with 20 years of peacekeeping experience, Chinese troops are capable of conducting peacekeeping missions at a higher level.
Located in Beijing's Huairou district, the Peacekeeping Center was set up in June last year to train peacekeeping troops.
Since 1990, China has sent 15,603 peacekeeping soldiers on 18 UN peacekeeping missions. Nine people died during the missions, including three military observers and six soldiers.
By the end of last month, China had 1,960 peacekeeping soldiers in nine UN peacekeeping missions, including those in Liberia, Congo, Sudan, and Lebanon.
Participating in the UN peacekeeping missions also helps promote the image of the Chinese military, Tao said.
"We came here to learn," said Colonel Major Djakoure Emmanuel with the Cote d'Ivoire embassy.
Djakoure, who heads the 200-member military attach corp in Beijing, said foreign military attachs have lots of opportunities for exchanges with the Chinese military.