The Chinese military poses no threat to the United States, asserted Gen. Chen Bingde, Chief of the General Staff of the People’s Liberation Army, during his official visit to the United States last week. “The United States has far more advanced weapons and equipment,” he told reporters during a joint press conference with Adm. Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Chen said the Chinese people “do not want to use the money [from China’s economic expansion] to buy equipment or advanced weapon systems to challenge the United States.” Instead, China’s military build-up is “mainly targeted” at deterring “separatists forces” on Taiwan, he assured. Among Chen’s other comments: China has only “garrison deployment across Taiwan” and not “operational deployment, much less missiles, stationed there.” Also, China’s test flight of the J-20 stealthy aircraft during Defense Secretary Robert Gates’ visit to Beijing in January was part of “routine” flight testing and was “not targeted at his visit whatsoever.” (Mullen-Chen transcript)
More USAF ‘Operational Imperatives’ Likely Coming
Aug. 11, 2022
Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall distilled the top fighting priorities of the Air Force and Space Force into seven “operational imperatives” chiefly as a mechanism to identify the spending transitions needed in the fiscal 2023 budget. But they are likely to persist, and more—on electronic warfare, cyber, and munitions—may be…