The Diplomat:
The Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s opposition to the United States and South Korea’s decision to deploy a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile defense system in South Korea will extend beyond just words, according to a spokesperson for the Chinese Ministry of Defense.
Senior Colonel Wu Qian, deputy director of the Information Office of China’s Ministry of National Defense (MND) and spokesperson for the MND, said at a regular press conference on Thursday that “the Chinese military’s opposition to the deployment of the THAAD system will definitely not stay on words only.”
As I’ve explained before, China primarily opposes the THAAD battery being deployed in South Korea due to the associated X-band AN/TPY-2 radar. Though Beijing had rejected U.S. offers for technical talks regarding the system, it has not clarified what specifically about the radar damages Chinese national security interests.
China has unofficially retaliated against South Korean companies for the deployment of THAAD, causing economic damage. Earlier this month, South Korea filed a complaint at the World Trade Organization that China was unfairly retaliating against it and that Beijing may have violated existing bilateral trade arrangements.
Lotte, the South Korean conglomerate that ceded part of its land on a golf course in Gyeongsanbuk-do for the placement of the battery, has seen multiple stores shut down by Chinese authorities.
The United States and South Korea agreed to deploy the missile defense system last year amid an intensifying ballistic missile threat from North Korea, which carried out 24 ballistic missile tests in 2016 and has carried out five missile launches to date in 2017.