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<p>As NATO’s 75th anniversary summit kicked off in Washington this week, China’s defence ministry made a surprise announcement.</p>
<p>An unspecified number of elite Chinese paratroopers and other military forces, it said, were flying to Belarus to conduct previously unannounced joint training that would last throughout the NATO gathering.</p>
<p>The exercise, codenamed Eagle Assault, will last 11 days until July 19, conducting anti-terrorist exercises including night landings, crossing water obstacles and urban operations.</p>
<p>More pointedly still, they will take place in the Belarusian city of Brest, five miles from the border with NATO member Poland - although Chinese officials denied the manoeuvres were aimed at any particular foreign country</p>
<p>Even without the drills - which appear to be among the largest exercises China has ever conducted on the European continent - China was always set to be on the agenda at the NATO summit.</p>
<p>There was a formal meeting on Thursday morning of alliance leaders with Asia-Pacific partners from Japan, South Korea and New Zealand. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese did not attend the meeting, instead represented by his deputy.</p>
<p>China is an ever-rising concern to many within NATO and beyond, not least because of what US and other allied officials say is Beijing's increasing support for Russia in Ukraine, delivering a growing number of critical components for Russian weapons systems, if not yet lethal weaponry itself.</p>
<p>We must not forget that today the PRC (People's Republic of China) is the largest enabler of Russia's war against Ukraine through the provision of dual-use goods, NATO Director of Policy Planning Benedetta Berti told an event at think-tank The Atlantic Council on Monday.</p>
<p>China could not expect to be treated as a responsible member of the international community while doing that, she added.</p>
<p>After the leak of a draft of the NATO summit communiqué that used similar language, Chinese officials responded furiously.</p>
<p>As we all know, China is not the creator of the crisis in Ukraine, a Chinese foreign affairs ministry spokesman said, describing the draft NATO declaration as full of Cold War mentality and belligerent rhetoric and the China-related content as full of provocations, lives, incitement and smears.</p>
<p>What approach new NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte will take to China remains unclear – but his predecessor was pulling few punches at his last international summit.</p>
<p>If China continues (like this), they cannot have it both ways, outgoing NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told another public think-tank session.</p>
<p>They cannot believe that they can have a kind of normal relationship with NATO allies in North America and Europe, and then continue to fuel the war in Europe that constitutes the biggest security challenge...since the Second World War.</p>
<p>SOME DIVISIONS OVER ASIA STRATEGY</p>
<p>Exactly how NATO might engage itself in Asia is a subject of no little disagreement – at last year’s conference in Vilnius, French President Emmanuel Macron vetoed an otherwise widely-backed proposal to open a small alliance office in Japan.</p>
<p>While supporters of that proposal say it is important to keep NATO directly involved in major global security issues including in the Pacific region, others – most particularly France – argue such activity risks being a distraction from NATO’s core task of defending Europe.</p>
<p>Hungary, whose nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban visited Beijing on Monday after an equally controversial trip to Moscow, said this week it was particularly opposed to NATO becoming what it called an anti-China bloc.</p>
<p>This year, Chinese officials have become much more vocal in their opposition to NATO conducting any Asia-facing work.</p><br />
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<p>It is necessary to resist the negative impact of the Indo-Pacific strategy and guard against NATO reaching out to the Asia-Pacific, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Thai counterpart Maris Sangiampongsa on Tuesday.</p>
<p>An alliance that began with 12 members in 1949, and now includes 30 European nations plus the United States and Canada, NATO’s founding North Atlantic Treaty declares that an attack on one member is an attack on all.</p>
<p>That promise is explicitly limited to the North Atlantic region, although the alliance has already occasionally operated “out of area including during conflicts in Afghanistan and Libya.</p>
<p>Speaking in Beijing on Monday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lian Jian responded to a question on the NATO summit by saying China's stance on the alliance remained consistent.</p>
<p>We firmly oppose NATO acting beyond its characterisation as a regional defence alliance, inserting itself into the Asia-Pacific to incite confrontation and rivalry and disrupting the prosperity and stability in this region, he said.</p>
<p>In reality, few of the discussions in Washington this week revolve around NATO “expanding to include Asia, certainly not through bringing in potential Asian members such as Japan, South Korea or the Philippines.</p>
<p>All of these countries have their own mutual defence deals with the US already, plus other, ever-deepening multinational relationships, all spurred by mounting worries over China.</p>
<p>Taiwan, recognised by most nations as part of China but functioning as a de facto independent state, has its relations with the US government under the US-Taiwan Relations Act, which has always left “strategically ambiguous whether Washington would defend the island, though President Joe Biden has more recently said several times emphatically that it would.</p>
<p>But NATO’s European members have plenty of other concerns about Beijing, including intellectual property theft and what they see as Chinese efforts to unfairly swamp their markets with cheap electric cars, batteries and other products.</p>