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BEIJING: China's position on suspending its military visits with the United States "remains unchanged" due to the US arms sale to Taiwan, a Chinese military spokesman said Thursday.
China late last month decided to suspend scheduled visits between the Chinese and US armed forces, in response to Washington's plan to sell a package of arms worth about $6.4 billion to Taiwan.
"The US side should bear full responsibility for the current difficult situation on China-US military exchanges," Defense Ministry spokesman Huang Xueping said in a statement on Thursday.
The two militaries had been expected to launch more exchanges in 2010, which include US Defense Secretary Robert Gates' visit to China and mutual visits of warships.
Gates said this week that he still planned to visit China later this year. But Huang said the US arms sale to Taiwan "seriously endangers China's national security, damages China's core interests, greatly disturbs the relations between the two countries and the two militaries, and tremendously harms the overall China-US cooperation and peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait."
"Therefore, China decided to suspend the planned mutual visits between the Chinese and US militaries. Our position has not changed," said Huang. "We demand the US side to take concrete measures and fully respect China's core interests and security concerns," he said.