The Chinese military today said it is working to advance its ties with  the defence forces of India, even as it intends to strengthen its  already "multi-dimensional" relationship with the Pakistani military.In a  41-page "white paper" outlining the policies and perceptions of world's  largest standing military of 2.3 million personnel, the People's  Liberation Army (PLA) said it intends to work at building trust with its  neighbouring countries."China has strengthened military relations with  its neighbouring countries," said the PLA policy paper."It conducts  friendly exchanges with the DPRK (North Korea) and the ROK (South Korea)  militaries, attaches importance to Sino-Japanese defence exchanges,  strengthens multi-dimensional Sino-Pakistani military exchanges and  cooperation, works to advance the Sino-Indian military relationship,"  the paper released to the media by its top military brass said.
While PLA  shares very close strategic links with its all-weather ally Pakistan,  it has also in the recent past tried to enhance ties with the Indian  military as part of wider attempts to improve overall relations between  the two countries.The process suffered a reverse last year after India,  in response to the denial of visa by China to its top General B S Jaswal  on the ground that he headed troops in Jammu and Kashmir, which it  regards as disputed territory. He was to come to Beijing to attend a  bilateral meeting.Following this, India called off its defence exchanges  with PLA, even though Chinese Defence Ministry continues to maintain  that its military ties with India were intact.The issue was expected to  figure in next month's meeting between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and  Chinese President Hu Jintao on the sidelines of Brazil, Russia, India,  China, South Africa (BRICS) at the Chinese island of Sanya.China had  also promised to review its policy to issue stapled visas to residents  of J and K.Besides this, the paper, which is issued every year said  China faced an increasingly "volatile" Asian region, in the backdrop of  attempts by US to expand its footprints."Profound changes are taking  shape in the Asia-Pacific strategic landscape. Relevant major powers are  increasing their strategic investment... The United States is  reinforcing its regional military alliances and increasing its  involvement in regional security affairs.
 Suspicion about China,  interference and countering moves against China from the outside are on  the increase," it said.It reiterated that China's national defence  policy is "defensive" in nature and said the pursuit of such a national  defence policy is determined by China's development path. 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
