WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Thursday underscored his concerns about the long range of a powerful U.S. radar that could be deployed in South Korea along with an advanced missile defence system and said Washington should explain its plans.
Wang told an event hosted by the Center for International and Strategic Studies think tank that China remained committed to working with the United States and other countries to de-nuclearise the Korean peninsula. He said he was optimistic that the United Nations would agree on a resolution criticizing North Korea for its Jan. 6 nuclear test.
But Wang said China remained concerned that the X-band radar to be deployed with the U.S. Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system built by Lockheed Martin Corp (N:LMT) had a range that extended far beyond the Korean peninsula into the interior of China. That in turn, he said, could jeopardise "China's legitimate national security interests."
He said the decision was ultimately up to South Korea, and China understood the desire of the United States and South Korea to ensure the defence of their own countries.
But he said China had raised concerns about the system's capabilities that should be addressed by the United States.
"We believe that China's legitimate security concerns must be taken into account," Wang said. "An explanation must be provided to China."
The United States and South Korea agreed earlier this month to start talks about deploying the THAAD system to South Korea to counter the growing threat of North Korea's weapons capabilities after its Feb. 7 launch of a long-range satellite.
One U.S. defence official said the talks were on track for next week.
At the Pentagon, Admiral Harry Harris, the commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific, said that if China wanted to prevent consideration of the THAAD system's deployment, it should lean on Pyongyang.
"China's interference in a decision that's to be made between alliance partners, the Republic of Korea and the United States, their interference in that process is preposterous, especially when you consider that THAAD is not a threat to China,"" Harris told reporters at the Pentagon.
"If China wanted to exert a lot of influence on somebody to prevent THAAD from being considered going into Korea, then they should exert that influence on North Korea."