China to boost Serb military with drones, other equipment
Serbia praised China Sept. 10 for boosting the Balkan nation’s military with drones and other equipment amid Western concerns that the arms buildup could threaten a fragile peace in the region.
A Serbian Defense Ministry statement after a visit by a high-ranking Chinese military delegation thanked Beijing for economic and military support.
Serbian officials said China has agreed the sale of armed drones, marking the first export of Chinese remotely piloted aircraft to a European country.
Defense Minister Aleksandar Vulin said the delivery expected in the coming months “will greatly strengthen the Serbian military, which will gain capabilities it has not had in the past.”
Serbia was at war with its neighbors in the 1990s. The country, which is formally seeking European Union membership, has already been boosting its armed forces with Russian warplanes, battle tanks and other equipment.
China has increasingly been economically and politically active in Serbia and elsewhere in southeastern Europe as part of its global Belt and Road campaign. The engagement near or within NATO’s turf have triggered Western concerns over rapidly increasing Chinese influence in the region.
Serbia has reportedly agreed to the delivery of nine Chengdu Pterodactyl-1 drones, known in China as Wing Loong, with a possible future order of additional 15. The combat drones are able to strike targets with bombs and missiles and can be used for reconnaissance tasks.
There are fears in the West that the arming of Serbia by its allies Russia and China could encourage the Balkan country toward another war, especially against its former province of Kosovo that proclaimed independence in 2008. Serbia, Russia and China don’t recognize Kosovo’s statehood, while the United States and most of the Western countries do. AP
Philippines: China wanted to restrict foreign forces at sea
The Philippine foreign secretary says China has sought to restrict the presence of foreign military powers in the South China Sea and foreign involvement in oil and gas projects in the disputed region under a pact it’s negotiating with Southeast Asian nations.
Foreign Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. said Sept. 11, however, that China has eased up on those demands, removing potential obstacles in the conclusion of the so-called “code of conduct” that it’s negotiating with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
China and the 10-nation ASEAN bloc have been negotiating the nonaggression pact in an effort to deter aggressive acts by Beijing and other claimant states that could spark a major armed confrontation in the disputed territories, which straddle some of the world’s busiest sea lanes. AP
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