China says US Golden Dome plan 'undermines global stability'
China urges US to abandon development and deployment of global missile defence system "as soon as possible"
China on Wednesday warned that Donald Trump's "Golden Dome" missile shield system "undermines global stability", after the US president announced $25 billion in initial funding for the plan.
"This undermines global strategic balance and stability. China expresses serious concern over this. We urge the United States to abandon the development and deployment of a global missile defence system as soon as possible," foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning said at a regular news briefing.
Trump on Tuesday announced $25 billion earmarked for the project, which he said could eventually cost a total of around $175 billion and would be operational in about three years.
"In the campaign, I promised the American people I would build a cutting-edge missile defence shield," Trump said at the White House on Tuesday. "Today I am pleased to announce we have officially selected architecture for this state-of-the-art system."
"Once fully constructed, the Golden Dome will be capable of intercepting missiles even if they are launched from other sides of the world, and even if they are launched from space," Trump said.
"This is very important for the success and even survival of our country."
He said US Space Force General Michael Guetlein will lead the effort, and that Canada has expressed interest in being part of it as "they want to have protection also."
While Trump put the total price at about $175 billion, the Congressional Budget Office has estimated the cost of space-based interceptors to defeat a limited number of intercontinental ballistic missiles at between $161 billion and $542 billion over 20 years.
Golden Dome has more expansive goals, with Trump saying it "will deploy next-generation technologies across the land, sea and space, including space-based sensors and interceptors."
Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth, speaking alongside Trump, said the system is aimed at protecting "the homeland from cruise missiles, ballistic missiles, hypersonic missiles, drones, whether they're conventional or nuclear."
China, Russia against Golden Dome
In response, Beijing condemned the initiative on Wednesday, labelling it a threat to global security and accusing the United States of instigating an arms race.
The plan's Golden Dome name stems from Israel's Iron Dome air defence system which has intercepted thousands of short-range rockets and other projectiles since it went into operation in 2011.
The United States faces various missile threats from adversaries, but they differ significantly from the short-range weapons that Israel's Iron Dome is designed to counter.
The 2022 Missile Defence Review pointed to growing threats from China and Russia.
Beijing is closing the gap with Washington when it comes to ballistic and hypersonic missile technology, while Moscow is modernising its intercontinental-range missile systems and developing advanced precision strike missiles, the document said.
It also said that the threat of drones — which have played a key role in the Ukraine war — is likely to grow, and warned of the danger of ballistic missiles from North Korea and Iran, as well as rocket and missile threats from non-state actors.
Beijing on Wednesday expressed "serious concern" over the plan, saying it undercuts "global strategic balance and stability."
"The United States puts its own interests first and is obsessed with seeking its own absolute security, which violates the principle that no country's security should come at the expense of others," Mao said at the briefing.
"(The plan) heightens the risk of space becoming a battlefield, fuels an arms race, and undermines international security," Mao added.
China this month had already joined Russia in slamming the concept as "deeply destabilising".
It "explicitly provides for a significant strengthening of the arsenal for conducting combat operations in space," said a statement published by the Kremlin after talks between the two sides.
The United States has gained valuable real-world experience in defending against missiles and drones in recent years.
In Ukraine, US systems have been used to counter advanced Russian missiles, while American planes and warships helped defend Israel against Iranian attacks last year and have repeatedly shot down missiles and drones launched at ships by Yemen's Tehran-backed Houthi rebels.
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