KUNMING, China — Chinese and U.S. commanders on Friday stressed the importance of maintaining military-to-military exchanges under the administration of President-elect Donald Trump, saying they are crucial for building confidence between the two armed forces that remain deeply wary of each other.



Troops from the two sides staged joint drills in the southwestern Chinese city of Kunming on Friday in an effort to better coordinate responses to humanitarian disasters.



"This kind of exchange acts as a bridge to promote relations between the two militaries and I am sure it will be conducted in an even higher level in the future," said Gen. Liu Xiaowu, commander of ground forces for China's Southern Theater Command.



Soldiers from Chinese PLA Southern Theater Command Army and the U.S. Army Pacific carry an injured man from a mocked earthquake-collapsed building as they conducting a joint rescue operation in the U.S.-China Disaster Management Exchange (DME) drill at a PLA's training base in Kunming, southwestern China's Yunnan Province, Friday, Nov. 18, 2016. Photo Credit: Andy Wong/AP

U.S. Army Pacific Commander Gen. Robert Brown also said he would advise the incoming administration to maintain the momentum of engagement.



"These types of military-to-military exchanges are really critical because of the trust they build," Brown said.



Trump has yet to articulate a clear defense policy toward China and the region as a whole, unsettling officials in close U.S. allies such as Japan and South Korea.





