Houston Chronicle

U.S. eases on threat to ban China airlines

- By David Koenig

The Trump administra­tion said Friday it will let Chinese airlines operate a limited number of flights to the U.S., backing down from a threat to ban the planes.

The decision came one day after China appeared to open the door to U.S. carriers United Airlines and Delta Air Lines resuming one flight per week each into the country.

The Transporta­tion Department said it will let Chinese passenger airlines fly a combined total of two round-trip flights per week between the U.S. and China, which it said would equal the number of flights China’s aviation authority will allow for U.S. carriers.

Delta praised the U.S. government for trying to “ensure fairness and access to China.” United said it was reviewing the matter.

Neither said whether the latest developmen­t in the dispute between the two countries would affect their plans. Both had hoped to offer more flights.

The Transporta­tion Department said it might further ease restrictio­ns if China does the same. Officials are concerned, however, about conditions China is imposing that could affect whether U.S. airlines resume their flights.

Those requiremen­ts include taking temperatur­es of all passengers in mid-flight and suspending an airline’s future flights if five or more passengers test positive for the coronaviru­s after arriving in China.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington didn’t respond to messages seeking comment.

The dispute between Washington and Beijing over airline service has been building for weeks and is part of broader trade and diplomatic tension between the world’s two biggest economies.

In early January, there were more than 300 flights per week between the two countries, but internatio­nal carriers reduced and then stopped flying to China as the coronaviru­s pandemic devastated demand for air travel. United, Delta and American Airlines suspended flights to China before mid-March.

Chinese airlines reduced but didn’t eliminate their flights to the U.S. They ran about 20 flights per week in February, 34 by mid-March.

Air China, China Eastern Airlines, China Southern Airlines and Xiamen Airlines continue flying those routes.

Travel in both China and the U.S. has partly recovered in the past two months, although it remains far below 2019 levels. In May, Chicago-based United and Atlanta-based Delta petitioned China to resume flights there, but received no response.

The Trump administra­tion protested that China’s refusal to grant access to U.S. airlines was unfair. The Transporta­tion Department announced Wednesday that it would prohibit all passenger airline flights from China no later than June 16.

On Thursday, the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China said it would let more foreign airlines fly to China starting next week as anticorona­virus controls are eased.

The order didn’t identify airlines, but it appeared to limit United and Delta to one flight per week because they stopped flying to China before mid-March. American, which is based in Fort Worth, doesn’t plan to return to China before October.

The air-service spat escalated against a backdrop of a long-running trade dispute between the U.S. and China. Washington also has criticized China’s handling of the coronaviru­s outbreak and treatment of Hong Kong.

Chinese officials fired back this week by highlighti­ng civil unrest and racial discrimina­tion in the U.S.

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