UNITED NATIONS, October 3 (Xinhua) -- China said here
Tuesday
that the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (ABM), the widely
accepted
cornerstone of global strategic stability, should be
strictly
observed.
 The statement was made by Hu Xiaodi, the Chinese
ambassador on
disarmament, when he was speaking to the general debate of
the
First Committee of the 55th General Assembly session, which
began
here Monday. The First Committee is in charge of
disarmament and
international security.
 "This treaty has direct bearings on the security
interest of
all countries, and should be strictly observed," Hu said.
 "Any move in violation of the ABM treaty, whatever
disguise it
takes, will undermine global strategic balance and
stability,
jeopardize trust between states, and produce far-reaching
negative
impacts on international peace, security and multilateral
disarmament and arms control process," he said.
 The ABM treaty, signed by the United States and the
former
Soviet Union in 1972, constitutes a cornerstone of global
strategic stability, and goes far beyond the U.S.-Russia
bilateral
relationship in its significance.
 The General Assembly session last year adopted a
resolution,
titled "Preservation of and Compliance with the Anti-
Ballistic
Missile Treaty," mirroring the hope of most countries in
the world
to maintain global strategic balance and stability.
 Most countries in the world "wish to keep intact the
efforts
and achievements in the field of arms control, disarmament
and
nonproliferation since the end of the Cold War," he said.
"They
are reluctant to see the trust and cooperation between
states
being jeopardized by the national missile defense system
(NMD)."
 The United States is actively engaged in developing the
missile
defense system in order to seek its own absolute security
superiority at the expense of the security of other member
states.
 U.S. President Bill Clinton made a decision recently not
to
deploy a national missile defense system for the time
being.
However, the decision itself does not necessarily mean that
Washington will give up the system.
 "We think this is a wise decision," he said. "Meanwhile,
we
have also noticed that the NMD program has not yet been
given up,
and the research and development of this system is now
still
intensifying."
 "As an important forum for international security and
disarmament, the UNGA (U.N. General Assembly) First
Committee
should pay serious attention to this issue," he said.
 At the current GA session, China will join Russia,
Belarus and
other countries in submitting a draft resolution on ABM
treaty for
the second time, he said. They submitted the draft last
year and
managed to have it adopted.
 "We expect more countries to support this draft
resolution, so
as to contribute to the maintenance of global strategic
balance
and stability in a spirit of sincerity and cooperation," he
said.
 "We also hope that the United States will heed the
appeals of
the international community, consult other countries on
this issue,
and drop the NMD program as soon as possible."

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