By Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Chinese military spending exceeded $145
billion last year as it advanced a program modernizing an arsenal of
drones, warships, jets, missiles and cyber weapons, the Pentagon said on
Thursday, offering a far higher figure than Beijing's official tally.
The Pentagon's estimate, using 2013 prices and exchange rates, was 21 percent above the $119.5 billion figure announced by China. It was detailed in an annual report to Congress that cited steady progress in Chinese defense capabilities.
It acknowledged that estimating Chinese spending can be difficult,
in part because of "poor accounting transparency and incomplete
transition from a command economy."
The report came just days after Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, using
unusually strong language, accused Beijing of destabilizing the region
in pursuit of territorial claims.
China claims almost the entire oil- and gas-rich South China Sea and
dismisses competing claims from Taiwan, Brunei, Vietnam, the
Philippines and Malaysia. Japan also has a territorial dispute with
China over islands in the East China Sea.
The 96-page report said China was placing emphasis on preparing for
potential contingencies in the South and East China Seas, noting an
October drill named Maneuver 5 in the Philippine Sea.
The drill, the Pentagon said, was the largest Chinese Navy open-ocean exercise seen to date.
"China's military investments provide it with a growing ability to
project power at increasingly longer ranges," the report said.
The United States last month charged five Chinese military officers
and accused them of hacking into American nuclear, metal and solar
companies to steal trade secrets, ratcheting up tensions between the two
world powers over cyber espionage.
The Pentagon report renewed warnings over cyber intrusions.
"China is using its ... capability to support intelligence
collection against the U.S. diplomatic, economic, and defense industrial
base sectors that support U.S. national defense program," it said.
The Pentagon also cited advances in Chinese drone technology. It
pointed to a Defense Science Board report cautioning Beijing's push
"combines unlimited resources with technological awareness that might
allow China to match or even outpace U.S. spending on unmanned systems
in the future."
It noted that in September 2013, a "probable" Chinese drone was
noted for the first time conducting reconnaissance over the East China
Sea. China also unveiled details of four drones under development in
2013, including the Ligian, China's first stealth drone, it said.
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