 
 
Chinese  and U.S. officials say the  two countries share a common concern over a nuclear-weapons armed North Korea and  both countries say they want to avoid confrontations at sea. These were among  the issues discussed in two days of high level defense talks that ended in Beijing. Under Secretary  for Defense Michele Flournoy headed the U.S. delegation.
 Speaking to reporters in Beijing, she said both  countries share concern about what she described as North Korea's recent  "provocative actions," and discussed the North Korean nuclear issue  in general.
 She said the two sides did not specifically discuss a North Korean ship off the  coast of China that is  allegedly carrying small arms to Burma.  If verified, this  would be in violation of a U.N. Security Council resolution that was recently  imposed on Pyongyang  after it conducted its second nuclear test at the end of May.
 "This was not the appropriate forum to have detailed operational level  discussions about how enforcement of this U.N. Security Council resolution was  going to go," Flournoy said.
 Serious concerns about North Korea
 The head of the Chinese side, Lieutenant-General Ma Xiaotian, said his country  has "serious concerns" about a nuclear North Korea. But he urged all  parties to keep negotiating. Ma says he is confident the U.S.-China military  relationship will continue to strengthen in the future. Ma says he  believes military ties will continue to make progress despite all the  difficulties.
 One recent issue has been a series of encounters between U.S. and Chinese ships in waters off China's coast that Beijing claims are within its so-called  exclusive economic zone. The Pentagon has said the U.S. ships involved were operating  in accordance with international law.
 U.S.  and Chinese military officials will hold special consultations in July, to  address the sea confrontation issue.
 Tension over Taiwan  arms sale
 The two sides also discussed shared interests in Afghanistan,  Pakistan and Iran, and with international anti-piracy efforts  off the coast of Somalia.   The just-concluded defense talks resumed after an 18-month hiatus. China suspended the meetings last year, after  the Bush administration announced a multi-billion-dollar arms deal with Taiwan, a separately governed island that Beijing considers a  renegade province.
 Under Secretary Flournoy said the Obama administration "inherited"  the arms-sale to Taiwan  and is in the process of deciding how it plans to proceed. 
 
Source: http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-06-24-voa19.cfm
Tags: China, USA, Defense, Military, Ma Xiaotian, Taiwan arms sale, Somalia, The Pentagon, Under Secretary Michelle Flournoy, North Korea, UN Security Council, Global Development News,
 
 

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