FM: US military drone reports 'groundless'

 
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Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei Tuesday slammed reports that China is attempting to steal unmanned military drone technology from the United States as "groundless". 

China and the U.S. have formed the cyber security working group and conducted smooth communications on the cyber security issue, said the spokesman, adding that such reports are groundless and not good for China-U.S. cooperation on cyber security.

Competition between the two countries over the development of drone technology has been the focus of the media's attention in recent days. The New York Times said on Saturday that "hackers based in Shanghai went after one foreign defense contractor after another" for almost two years. A U.S. cybersecurity company told the newspaper the Shanghai hackers were after "the technology behind the clear U.S. lead in military drones". 

Unmanned aircraft have been put into widespread use around China for military reconnaissance, geological surveys and disaster relief. But Chinese analysts said the U.S. is ramping up pressure on China to gain the upper hand in the development and trade of military drones.

Ding Hao, a senior researcher at the People's Liberation Army's Academy of Military Science, said it's common for Washington to tarnish China's image with accusations of technology theft.

"In the eyes of Washington, China also stole technologies regarding nuclear submarines," Ding said.

Yang Jian, vice-president of Shanghai Institutes for International Studies, said the U.S. has failed to shed its Cold War mentality.

The U.S. is the leading developer of drones, but international powers such as China, Russia and countries in Europe are also working to develop their own drone technologies.

An October report by the Defense Science Board for the U.S. Department of Defense said "the military significance of China's move into unmanned systems is alarming", suggesting that Beijing might "easily match or outpace U.S. spending on unmanned systems, rapidly close the technology gaps and become a formidable global competitor in unmanned systems".

Ding said Washington is feeling threatened by Beijing because it believes China is expanding its maritime presence in the Pacific Ocean and challenging the U.S. in the region.

Du Wenlong, a senior researcher at the PLA's Academy of Military Science, said the U.S. has spared no effort in lobbying the Japanese to buy the Global Hawk unmanned high-altitude reconnaissance aircraft mainly because of its own global military strategy.

"The drones will be the eyes of not only Japan but also the U.S. in the region," Du said.

As a high-profile buyer of U.S. drones, the Japanese Defense Ministry is considering deploying the expensive and top-of-the-line unmanned aircraft, which were used by the U.S. military, as early as fiscal year 2015, the Japan Times reported recently.

Experts said China's drones are far from being a real threat to the U.S.' drone development program. The overall level of China's unmanned aircraft technologies still lags "15 to 20 years" behind Western countries, China National Radio reported.

(China Daily contributed to the story)

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