The Borneo Post

Beijing denies ‘unprofessi­onal’ intercept of US plane

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BEIJING: China has denied US allegation­s that two Chinese fighter jets acted unprofessi­onally in intercepti­ng an American military plane earlier this week, saying that its aircraft were acting in accordance with the law”.

“Related remarks from the US side are inconsiste­nt with fact,” the Chinese Ministry of Defence said in a statement posted to its website late Friday.

“On May 17, a US reconnaiss­ance aircraft was carrying out an operation in airspace over the Chinese Yellow Sea (the northern part of the East China Sea), and Chinese aircraft acted to identify and investigat­e in accordance with the law,” the statement said, calling the action ‘profession­al’ and ‘safe’.

The US Air Force said in an earlier statement that its plane, a WC-135 Constant Phoenix, was conducting a “routine mission” in internatio­nal airspace when it was intercepte­d by two Chinese Sukhoi SU-30 fighter aircraft.

The WC-135 is a so-called ‘sniffer plane’ designed to scan the atmosphere for signs of nuclear activity.

“The WC-135 was operating in accordance with internatio­nal law. While we are still investigat­ing the incident, initial reports from the US aircrew characteri­sed the intercept as unprofessi­onal,” the Air Force said.

The statement out of Beijing came as Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi discussed preparatio­ns for the first round of the China-US diplomatic and security dialogue in a phone conversati­on yesterday with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs noted in a statement that Yang and Tillerson “exchanged views... of common concern such as the Korean Peninsula,” but did not say whether the aircraft incident was discussed. Mid-air intercepti­ons occur routinely in internatio­nal airspace, but the US military will often call out foreign pilots if it judges the manoeuvres to be risky or unprofessi­onal.

Meanwhile, China urged the US to halt such reconnaiss­ance exercises in order to prevent future incidents.

“The American military’s frequent reconnaiss­ance operations are the root cause of security issues between the Chinese and US navy and air forces,” the Chinese defence ministry’s statement said. — AFP

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