Manila Bulletin

China, US stress good manners in avoiding aerial incidents

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BEIJING (AP) – In the sometimes-testy rivalry between Washington and Beijing, good manners count. A recent amendment to a US-China accord on safe encounters between their military pilots calls for keeping a secure distance, communicat­ing clearly and keeping a lid on rude body language.

“Military aircrew should refrain from the use of uncivil language or unfriendly physical gestures,’’ says the third amendment to the safety memorandum.

The stipulatio­n shows the degree to which the two sides hope to avoid unintended events, although there’s no evidence that insulting behavior has been a factor in any recent encounters.

It comes as the two countries see themselves operating in ever closer contact, a consequenc­e of China’s robust assertions of its South China Sea maritime claims and a renewed US focus on Asia that will see 60 percent of the Navy fleet assigned to the region.

The amendment was signed shortly before a state visit last month to Washington by Chinese President Xi Jinping, who has exerted stronger control over the armed forces than any of his predecesso­rs since Deng Xiaoping in the late 1980s.

That came on the heels of a Sept. 15 incident in which two Chinese fighterbom­bers made what the US Pacific Command described as an unsafe intercepti­on of a US Air Force RC-135 surveillan­ce plane patrolling about 80 miles (130 kilometers) off the Chinese coast. Previously, a Chinese fighter jet executed a barrel-roll as it came within 9 meters (30 feet) of a US Navy P-8 Poseidon surveillan­ce plane over the South China Sea in August 2014.

In the most serious such incident, aircraft from the two countries collided over the South China Sea in 2001, killing a Chinese jet fighter pilot and forcing a heavily damaged US EP-3 surveillan­ce plane to land at a Chinese base. China interrogat­ed and detained the 24 crew members for more than a week, sparking the biggest crisis in bilateral relations in more than a decade.

In that case, the lost Chinese pilot, Wang Wei, had previously flown close enough to US aircraft for their crew to see his e-mail address written on a piece of paper held up inside his cockpit.

Within the Chinese military’s ``environmen­t of bravado,’’ the actions of rogue pilots can be hard to rein in, said Denny Roy, an expert on the Chinese military at the East-West Center in Hawaii.

However, by signing the memorandum and its annexes, China wants to indicate to the US that aggressive challenges in the air are not necessaril­y national policy, Roy said.

“It’s a positive step in bilateral relations because it indicates a Chinese interest in stability and in advancing militaryto-military relations,’’ Roy said.

Tensions have also risen over China’s declaratio­n of an air-defense identifica­tion zone over disputed islands in the East China Sea in 2013. The US, Japan and others have refused to recognize the move because the area encompasse­d by the zone includes territory controlled by Japan. China has so far made little effort at enforcing it.

Meanwhile, the South China Sea remains the area of greatest contention, with China upping the ante by building artificial islands on top of reefs and atolls it controls topped with buildings and airstrips.

Pacific Fleet Commander Adm. Scott Swift, the US Navy’s top commander in the Pacific, said last week his sailors were prepared to patrol within the 12-nautical mile (21-kilometers) territoria­l limit of the newly constructe­d islands. That move would reinforce Washington’s refusal to recognize them as sovereign territory and assert its right to freedom of navigation.

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