East Bay Times

Chinese fighter jet flies within 10 feet of a U.S. B-52 bomber

- By Mike Ives

A Chinese fighter jet came within 10 feet of a U.S. Air Force B-52 bomber over the South China Sea this week in a nighttime maneuver that nearly caused a collision, the U.S. military said Thursday.

The pilot of the J-11 jet that drew close to the B-52 in internatio­nal airspace on Tuesday night “flew in an unsafe and unprofessi­onal manner” and with “uncontroll­ed excessive speed,” the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command said in a statement.

The U.S. military also released a grainy, blackand-white video that it said showed the encounter. The midair clip, apparently filmed from the bomber, appears to show the jet drawing perilously close.

The statement and video were released on the same day that China's foreign minister, Wang Yi, arrived in the United States for meetings with U.S. officials — including Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Jake Sullivan, President Joe Biden's national security adviser — and at a time of tension between the two countries over national security, economic competitio­n and other issues.

Mao Ning, a spokespers­on for China's Foreign Ministry, said Friday that “U.S. military planes have traveled thousands of miles to show off their force at China's doorstep, which is the root cause of sea and air security risks.”

“It is also not conducive to regional peace and stability,” she said, speaking at a regular news briefing in Beijing. “China will continue to take resolute measures to safeguard national sovereignt­y security and territoria­l integrity.”

Chinese officials have previously depicted Chinese air intercepts of U.S. aircraft as reasonable responses to foreign military patrols that threaten the country's security. In June, China's defense minister at the time, Gen. Li Shangfu, downplayed an episode in which a U.S. naval destroyer slowed to avoid a possible collision with a Chinese navy ship that had crossed its path as it moved through the strait between China and Taiwan, the selfgovern­ed island that Beijing claims as its own.

Speaking at a conference in Singapore, Li said in June that the best way to avoid an accident was for countries outside the region, like the United States, to leave and “mind your own business.”

But the Indo-Pacific Command's statement Thursday said that the latest near miss was part of a “dangerous pattern of coercive and risky operationa­l behavior” by Chinese military jets against U.S. aircraft in internatio­nal airspace over both the South China Sea and the East China Sea, which separates China from Japan.

The Pentagon told Congress in a report this month that it had recorded more than 180 intercepts of U.S. aircraft by Chinese military forces in the Asia-Pacific region since the autumn of 2021 — more than in the previous decade. Some of those intercepts were in the South China Sea.

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