Qatar Tribune

US urges China open ‘lines of communicat­ion’ after jet incident

- DPA

THE US on Wednesday warned about radio silence between Beijing and Washington, following an incident over the South China Sea involving a Chinese fighter jet and a US reconnaiss­ance aircraft.

“When you have tensions like this, you want to make sure you can talk. That’s why I want to keep the lines of communicat­ion open,” US National Security Council communicat­ions director John Kirby told CNN.

“We agree they’re not open and we need to get them open,” he continued.

On Friday, a US RC-135 aircraft was conducting a “safe and routine mission over the South China Sea in internatio­nal airspace,” when a Chinese pilot flew his fighter jet directly in front of the US aircraft, the US

Pacific Command said in a statement on Tuesday.

Washington accused the pilot of an “unnecessar­ily aggressive” intercept manoeuvre.

In turn China accused the US of “provocativ­e and dangerous actions,” saying such flights undermine China’s sovereignt­y.

China claims huge swathes of the resource-rich South China

Sea, where it has built artificial islands with military-capable facilities and entered territoria­l waters of neighbouri­ng countries while searching for oil and gas, leading to conflict with South-East Asian nations, including Vietnam, Malaysia, the Philippine­s and Brunei.

The US and China’s neighbouri­ng countries accuse Beijing

of increasing militariza­tion of the region.

Ties between Beijing and Washington are at their worst since diplomatic relations were establishe­d in 1979. China’s backing for Russia’s war in Ukraine, its claims in the South China Sea, US controls on high-tech exports and an ongoing trade war with punitive tariffs are among the sources of contention.

Since the incident over the alleged Chinese spy balloons in February and the cancellati­on of a visit to China by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, dialogue has stalled.

Most recently, China rejected the US request for a meeting of the two countries’ defence ministers at the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies defence summit in Singapore scheduled to start on Friday.

A Pentagon spokesman said the Chinese side was refusing to meet.

 ?? ?? This screen grab from a video shows a J-16 fighter pilot from China flying in front of the nose of a US Air Force RC-135 aircraft over South China Sea.
This screen grab from a video shows a J-16 fighter pilot from China flying in front of the nose of a US Air Force RC-135 aircraft over South China Sea.

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