http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/137155/1/...


(Re-post of 51437 that ended up a bit garbled during its trip from the
Post Message page.)

Time is GMT + 8 hours
Posted: 13 March 2005 2105 hrs

Chinese president named top military chief, tells army to prepare for war

BEIJING : President Hu Jintao was named China's top military chief on
Sunday, promptly telling the army to prepare for war to safeguard the
country's territorial integrity, in an apparent reference to Taiwan.

In a move that marked the final step in China's first bloodless
leadership transition, Hu, 62, replaced aging former leader Jiang
Zemin, 78, as chairman of the state's Central Military Commission
(CMC).

He was selected by an overwhelming majority of 2,886 votes to six
against and five undecided at a meeting of China's legislature, the
National People's Congress (NPC), the official Xinhua news agency
said.

State television CCTV showed Hu bowing to the NPC delegates while they
gave him a long round of applause.

Hu used his appointment on Sunday to show China's new leadership
intended no let up in its determination to stop rival Taiwan from
becoming independent.

The president told a meeting of military delegates to the NPC that
China's top priority was safeguarding its territorial integrity.

"We must ... always place the task of defending national sovereignty,
security and territorial integrity and safeguarding the interests of
national development above anything else," Hu was quoted as saying by
Xinhua.

His comments came on the eve of a meeting on Monday in which the
parliament is expected to pass an "anti-secession" law which gives the
Chinese military the legal basis for attacking Taiwan if it moves
towards independence.

At the same time, Beijing insists that despite the law, "non-peaceful
means" will be used only as a "last resort."

Hu indicated that reunifying with Taiwan by force, as Beijing has
often said it would do if necessary, was not far from China's mind.

"All comrades of the military should correctly understand the
situation and resolutely perform the military's historical mission in
the new century and the new development stage," he said.

"We shall step up preparations for possible military struggle and
enhance our capabilities to cope with crises, safeguard peace, prevent
wars and win the wars if any," Hu said.

The Chinese president had already succeeded Jiang in September as
chairman of the Communist Party's CMC, which holds the real power over
the world's largest military.

Sunday's appointment marks a further consolidation of power by Hu,
whose rise to China's top leadership positions began in November 2002
when he replaced Jiang as secretary general of the Communist Party.

He took over from Jiang as state president in 2003.

With Sunday's appointment, Hu has taken over all of Jiang's
responsibilities.

Jiang had held the military post for 15 years, since he was hastily
installed after the massacre of pro-democracy protesters at Beijing's
Tiananmen Square in 1989.

Like Jiang, Hu faces the handicap of having never served in the armed
forces and like him, Hu is expected to win over loyalty from the
military by promoting supporters to key positions and advocating
modernisation of the armed forces - essentially keeping the top brass
happy by boosting their budget.

On Sunday, Hu emphasised the importance of continuing to modernise the
military, but underlined the need to "balance the country's economic
development and national defence building," urging the military to
modernise with "low cost yet high efficiency."

On Monday, the largely rubber stamp legislature is expected to approve
a 12.6 percent year-on-year increase in the official military budget
for this year.

Analysts said a major challenge Hu will face is maintaining a tough
stand on Taiwan, to prevent the island Beijing wants reunified from
declaring formal independence.

"It remains an important priority for the Chinese leadership ... each
new leadership needs to show it has a credible position on Taiwan,"
said Brian Bridges, a political scientist at Lingnan University in
Hong Kong.

"I'm not sure Hu Jintao wants to go to war with Taiwan so early after
he took power, but the fact the law comes at this early stage of his
(Hu's) power, he's probably trying to show nationalists in China that
he's standing up for national rights."

Taiwan has been ruled separately since the end of a civil war in 1949.
- AFP 





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