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China slows military budget rise | China slows military budget rise |
(about 1 hour later) | |
China has said its military spending will increase by 7.5% in 2010, ending a long run of double-digit growth. | China has said its military spending will increase by 7.5% in 2010, ending a long run of double-digit growth. |
It will spend 532.1bn yuan ($77.9bn:£51.7bn) over the year, the spokesman of the country's annual parliamentary session announced. | |
Li Zhaoxing said that, as a proportion of GDP, China still spends less than other countries, such as the US. | |
Washington has repeatedly urged China to be more open about its rapidly rising military spending. | Washington has repeatedly urged China to be more open about its rapidly rising military spending. |
Speaking at a news conference, Mr Li claimed China was increasing transparency on this issue. | |
He said the extra money being spent on the military would help it meet various security threats, without specifying what those threats were. | |
But he added: "The only purpose of China's limited military strength is to safeguard China's sovereignty and territorial integrity." | But he added: "The only purpose of China's limited military strength is to safeguard China's sovereignty and territorial integrity." |
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According to Chinese figures, this is the first time in more than 20 years that the military budget increase has dipped below 10%. | |
The spending spree began in the late 1980s, when China embarked on an ambitious programme to upgrade its armed forces. | |
Since then it has bought and produced its own high-tech weapons, and reduced the number of personnel in an attempt to have fewer, but better trained, troops. | |
Salaries and other benefits for officers and ordinary soldiers have also been improved. | |
Previous large spending increases could explain the smaller increase this year. | |
"China has achieved its targets in the past by providing continuous double-digit budget increases," said Andrew Yang, an expert on China's military who is now Taiwan's deputy defence minister. | |
Many experts believe the actual amount spent by China on its armed forces is far higher than the published amount. | |
And Washington, among others, worries about what the country's ultimate goals may be. | |
In a recently published book, called The China Dream, a senior officer in China's People's Liberation Army said the country should aim to build a major military force that could challenge the US this century. | |
Other officers attending the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), an advisory body that holds a meeting at the same time as the parliamentary session, rejected that idea. | |
But the comments underscore the military tension that currently exists between China and, primarily, the United States. | |
That relationship was not improved when Washington announced earlier this year that it intended to go ahead with the sale of weapons worth $6.4bn to Taiwan, a self-governing island that China considers its own. |