China firmly opposes any form of military
cooperation or contact between the United States and Taiwan,
as it violates the principles of the three Sino-US joint
communiqués.
Foreign Ministry spokesman
Liu Jianchao made the remarks Tuesday when asked to comment
on the newly-signed US Defense Authorization Bill for fiscal
year 2003 passed by the US Congress.
China had on many occasions made
representations to the US government on the bill and the US
side had made clear time and again its opposition to the
Taiwan-related provisions in the bill, Liu said.
The Taiwan-related contents of the
bill, though weakened, still violated US commitments to
China on the Taiwan issue. China resolutely opposed the
provisions of the bill which sent wrong signals to
proponents of "Taiwan independence," he said.
China urged the United States to adhere
to the one-China policy and abide by the three Sino-US joint
communiqués and its commitments to oppose "Taiwan
independence." The United States should desist from
meddling in the Taiwan issue to avoid damaging Sino-US
relations.
Russian President Vladimir
Putin's visit to China, which was crowned with a success,
has injected new vitality into the growth of bilateral ties,
the spokesman said.
President Putin and
President Jiang Zemin reviewed the course of development of
Sino-Russian relations over the past decade, formulated
plans to promote the strategic partnership of bilateral
cooperation, and also defined the direction and major areas
for future cooperation, Liu said.
The
two presidents, he added, also exchanged views on major
international issues and reached wide-ranging and
significant consensus.
Moreover, the
two presidents signed a lengthy joint statement of the two
countries concerning politics, trade and economics, science
and technology, education, culture, and other areas, as well
as on major consensus concerning some important
international issues and a number of Asia-Pacific regional
issues, the spokesman said.
When asked
to comment on the preemptive anti-terrorism strikes proposed
by Australian Prime Minister John Howard, Liu said that all
countries must abide by international law and the United
Nations Charter in the fight against terrorism.
Liu said China firmly supports the
fight against all forms of terrorism, but strikes should
based on conclusive evidence, clear-cut targets and in
accordance with the Charter of the United Nations and
international codes of conduct.
All
this is also the common understanding of the international
community, he said.
China is willing to
further ties with India and to build on their steady
development in recent years, the spokesman said.
Liu said the two nations continued
frequent high-level exchanges, reinforcing political trust
and expanding trade and economic cooperation, as well as
promoting exchanges in other fields.
China welcomed Russian President
Vladimir Putin's visit to India and believed Russia would
play a positive role in promoting stability in south Asia
and dialogue between India and Pakistan, Liu said.