Working for lasting world peace and creating a happy
life and an advanced culture for all mankind, lofty ideals held by all the
world's peoples, are likewise the sincerely held aspirations of the
Chinese
people.
The Chinese nation loves peace dearly and has made
major contributions to peace and other progressive causes for all of mankind.
Modern history has served as grim witness to China's great sufferings and the
humiliation of the Chinese people as the result of imperialist and colonialist
invasion and partition. Countless Chinese sons and daughters shed their blood or
laid down their lives to free the nation from this cruel bondage and plundering,
advancing wave upon wave, until national liberation and independence were
finally won under the leadership of the Communist Party of China. The Chinese
people know only too well the true value of independence, sovereignty and
equality.
China's guiding principle of seeking peace and
development has been reflected in each of the constitutions the nation has
adopted since the founding of New China. The Common Programme of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference, which was passed at the First
Plenary Session of the CPPCC in September, 1949 and served as a provisional
state constitution, affirmed that China would "stand for lasting international
peace and friendly cooperation among the people of the world, and oppose the
imperialist policies of aggression and war." The Constitution of 1954 stipulated
that "the steadfast policy of our country in international affairs is to work
hard for the lofty goal of world peace and progress for mankind." The present
Constitution, adopted in 1982, once again states that China "strives to
safeguard world peace and promote the cause of human progress."
The forces for world peace have grown rapidly since
the 1980s, and peace and development have become the two major issues of the
day. China's scientific analysis of the development trends and characteristics
of the international situation has produced the conclusion that with the
concerted efforts of people throughout the world, a new world war can not only
be deferred but it can possibly be avoided as well. In the new era of peace and
development, the task of first importance facing the Chinese people is to
develop the economy and change the poverty and backwardness of the nation. With
this in mind, China has focused its development strategy on economic
construction.
China's modernization programme is an important
component of the cause for the common development and progress of mankind. A
peaceful international environment is necessary for China's development and a
prosperous and stable China, in turn, will increasingly benefit world peace. For
this reason, China unwaveringly pursues a foreign policy of peace and
independence. It resolutely protects its national independence and sovereignty
and opposes foreign interference; seeks to establish and develop extensive,
friendly relations with all the world's countries on the basis of the Five
Principles of Peaceful Coexistence, strengthen unity and cooperation with
developing countries and actively develop good-neighbourly relations with
bordering nations; stands for the proposition that all nations, big or small,
are equal and opposes hegemonism and power politics in any form; advocates the
settlement of international disputes through peaceful means; and opposes the
threat or use of force in international relations.
China's national defence policy is defensive in
nature. Its basic goals are to consolidate national defence, resist foreign
aggression, defend the nation's sovereignty over its land, sea and air as well
as its maritime rights and interests, and safeguard national unity and security.
National defence work in China is subordinate to and in service of the nation's
overall economic construction, adhering to the principles of "combining
peacetime with wartime" and "integrating the army with the people." In terms of
military strategy, China follows a policy of positive defence and adheres to the
idea of people's war. China does not seek world or regional hegemony. China does
not station any troops or set up any military bases in any foreign country.
China's national defence construction is not directed against any country, and
thus, does not pose a threat to any country.
During the course of foreign policy implementation
and national defence construction, China attaches importance to the active role
of arms control and disarmament, holding that arms control and disarmament are
conducive to reducing and eliminating the danger of war and increasing factors
for international peace and security. Such controls and reductions will help
improve relations and mutual trust among nations and will enable the
contribution of more resources, capital and technology to economic and social
development.
Protracted, unremitting efforts by the international
community have led to great progress in international arms control and
disarmament in the past few years. Nonetheless, mankind should remain coolly
cognizant that the path to international arms control and disarmament is still
extremely complex and difficult. While some progress has been made in nuclear
disarmament, the major nuclear powers, with the world's most sophisticated and
largest quantity of nuclear weapons in hand, have neither abandoned their policy
of nuclear deterrence nor stopped the development of nuclear weapons and outer
space weapons including guided missile defence systems. On the one hand, they
vie with one another in dumping their advanced weapons on the international
market, even using weapons transfers as a means to interfere in other nations'
domestic affairs. On the other, they resort to discriminative anti-proliferation
and arms control measures, directing the spearhead of arms control at the
developing countries.
China holds that the international community should
promote fair, rational, comprehensive and balanced arms control and disarmament
and observe the following principles:
- All nations should follow the purposes and
principles for safeguarding international peace and security contained in the
Charter of the United Nations and other relevant international legal norms. At
the same time arms control and disarmament is worked for, aggression must be
curbed. Regional conflicts must be fairly and rationally resolved and force or
threat of force should not be used in international relations. Hegemonism and
power politics should be eliminated in international relations, so as to create
an international environment and conditions favourable to disarmament.
- The ultimate goal of disarmament is the complete
prohibition and thorough destruction of nuclear weapons and other weapons of
mass destruction (including chemical and biological weapons), the complete
prohibition of outer space weapons, and reductions in conventional arms as
befits actual circumstances. The big powers, possessors of the largest and most
sophisticated nuclear and conventional arsenals, bear a special responsibility
in arms control and disarmament
- Preventing the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction. The prevention of proliferation is not in itself the ultimate goal.
Only through complete prohibition and thorough destruction of such weapons can
proliferation be effectively prevented. Preventing proliferation should neither
present an obstacle to the just rights and interests of all countries in the
peaceful use of science and technology nor restrict or harm economic, scientific
and technological development in developing countries.
- All nations have the right to maintaining an
appropriate national defence capability and to legitimate self-defence. It is
necessary at all stages of the arms control and disarmament process to ensure
all nations from sustaining damage to their security. All nations, big or small,
have the right to join in discussions and decisions on arms control and
disarmament on an equal basis. The implementation of international arms control
and disarmament must not impair the independence and sovereignty of any nation,
entail the use of force or the threat of force, or interfere with the internal
affairs of any nation.
- All countries, particularly developed nations,
should strictly control the transfer of sensitive materials, technologies and
military equipment, practise restraint and halt the irresponsible transfer of
weapons.
- All nations should endorse, respect and support
the arms control and disarmament measures adopted after voluntary consultation,
negotiation and agreement between nations and in light of actual regional
circumstances.
For many years China
has adhered to these basic principles, bearing its due share of international
arms control and disarmament obligations and responsibilities, working hard to
promote peace and development for
humanity.