
Vice Chairman of China's Central Military Commission Guo
Boxiong (R) shakes hands with visiting Marine Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the
U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, in China's capital Beijing on March 22, 2007.

Vice Chairman of China's Central Military Commission and
Defense Minister Gen. Cao Gangchuan (R) talks with visiting Marine Gen. Peter
Pace, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, in China's capital Beijing on
March 22, 2007. Pace arrived in Beijing on Thursday for a four-day visit.

Marine Gen. Peter Pace (L), chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs
of Staff, and Liang Guanglie, chief of the General Staff of the People's
Liberation Army (PLA) of China, salute during the welcoming ceremony in honor of
Pace in Beijing, the capital of China, on March 22, 2007.

Marine Gen. Peter Pace (R), chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs
of Staff, and Liang Guanglie, chief of the General Staff of the People's
Liberation Army (PLA) of China, walk during the welcoming ceremony in honor of
Pace in Beijing, the capital of China, on March 22, 2007.

Marine Gen. Peter Pace (R, front), chairman of the U.S. Joint
Chiefs of Staff, talks with Liang Guanglie (L, front), chief of the General
Staff of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) of China, during the welcoming
ceremony in honor of Pace in Beijing, the capital of China, on March 22,
2007.
BEIJING, March 22 (Xinhua) -- Marine Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the U.S.
Joint Chiefs of Staff, arrived in Beijing on Thursday for a four-day visit, the
latest sign of the warming ties between the two armed forces.
Invited by Chief of the General Staff of the People's Liberation Army (PLA)
Liang Guanglie, Pace is the first high-ranking U.S. military officer to visit
China this year.
"Your visit is one of the most important items of the China-U.S. military
exchanges this year," Liang told Pace Thursday afternoon following a welcoming
ceremony.
"I agreed with you this visit is very important for the two countries. I
truly believe the future is very great for both China and the United States,"
Pace said before the closed-door talks began in Bayi Building, the seat of the
Central Military Commission (CMC), China's top military authority.
Pace said he and Liang should "help each other, understand each other and
find ways to do good things for the future of the two countries."
Liang said the overall China-U.S. military ties enjoy "good momentum of
stable development", citing the progress on high-level exchanges between
military institutions.
He said China would like to further military exchanges with the United
States at various levels.
Liang said Taiwan is an inalienable part of the Chinese territory and the
Taiwan issue has a bearing on China's core interests and the sentiments of the
1.3 billion Chinese people.
"We have been keeping a close watch on the Taiwan secessionists' actions
and attempts," Liang was quoted as saying in a statement issued by Chinese
Defense Ministry after the meeting.
"We will make our utmost efforts to safeguard the stability of the Taiwan
Strait and push for a peaceful unification of the motherland," he said.
Later Thursday afternoon, Pace also met separately with Guo Boxiong and Cao
Gangchuan, both vice chairmen of the CMC.
"The current China-U.S. military ties are not easy to come by, thus the two
sides should treasure it," Guo said.
Guo also briefed Pace on China's road of peaceful development and defense
policy.
Cao, also China's Defense Minister, said China pursues a defense policy
which is defensive in nature, and that China's defense spending is moderate.
Pace said the U.S. government will adhere to the one-China policy and hoped
the Taiwan issue will be resolved peacefully, according to the statement of
Chinese Defense Ministry.
This is also Pace's first China visit since he was sworn in as Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 2005.
Pace will also hold a seminar with researchers with the PLA Military
Science Academy on Friday.
The four-day visit will also take Pace to China's military areas and
institutions.
Pace will meet with leaders of the Shenyang and Nanjing Military Areas.
Pace's visit is part of the growing high-level visits between Chinese and
U.S. armed forces over the past years.
Guo Boxiong paid a week-long visit to the United States last July at the
invitation of U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. He was the highest-ranking
Chinese military officer to visit the United States since 2001.
William Fallon, Commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific, came last May and
August. He invited a Chinese delegation to observe a U.S. military exercise in
Guam last June, the first invitation of its kind extended by the United States.
The defense departments of the two countries restored a series of
consultation mechanisms on maritime security, humanitarian disaster relief and
military-related environmental protection.
A breakthrough in China-U.S. military ties was the first-ever China-U.S.
joint search-and-rescue exercise last year.
Analysts, however, said there remain some "obstacles" preventing China-U.S.
military ties from going forward, which include the Taiwan issue.
In late February, the U.S. Department of Defense announced that it plans to
sell to Taiwan over 400 missiles worth of 421 million U.S. dollars. The proposed
sale will include Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air missiles, Maverick missiles,
as well as spare parts and maintenance equipment.
The U.S. congress passed some bills limiting military exchanges with China,
as represented by the 2000 Fiscal Year Defense Authorization Act.