Unchartered waters: Japan and China scramble fighter jets in island dispute
RT,
12
Janaury, 2013
The
standoff between Japan and China escalated to a new level after both
sides sent their jets to tail each other in airspace near the cluster
of disputed islands that has created tension between the two powers.
A
Chinese Y-8 transport plane flew near the vicinity of the Diaoyu or
Senkaku islands (as they are known by the Chinese and the Japanese
respectively) on what the Defense Ministry in Beijing described as a
“routine
patrol”
on Thursday. It was immediately tailed by a Japanese F-15. Chinese
authorities then ordered two more J-10 planes into the air, to
perform “verification
and monitoring”
on the Japanese aircraft.
"Aircraft
from Japan's Self-Defense Forces have intensified their surveillance
activities against China, and expanded the area of their scope,
disturbing the normal patrols and training of Chinese civilian and
military aircraft,"
said a spokesman from China’s Ministry of Defense.
A
Foreign Ministry spokesman followed with another statement, accusing
Tokyo of “creating
tension”.
Japanese
officials responded by claiming that Chinese planes have increasingly
intruded into the airspace above the islands, which are currently
owned by Japan. They noted that over the past year alone jets
protecting the area had to be scrambled over 150 times, though it is
not clear how many of those were a reaction to China’s presence.
Japan's Air Self-Defense Force F-15 jet fighter (AFP Photo/Kazuhiro Nogi)
The
Senkaku Islands, located in the East China Sea, have been controlled
by Japan since 1895, but China insists that it has historic rights to
them dating back to the 16th century. The archipelago, which is
halfway between both countries, is currently uninhabited, but the
ground below could house significant mineral resources.
"Our
stance that we will adamantly protect our waters and territories has
not changed at all. As I said before, there is no room for
negotiations,"
said Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in the wake.
Japan
has just increased its defense budget for the first time in 11 years,
while China’s has more than quintupled over the past decade and now
trails that only of the US.
For
some time the islands have proven a blight in relations, with
nationalist politicians from both sides increasing their rhetoric in
recent years, but tensions have grown rapidly since the Japanese
government purchased all privately owned islands in September last
year.
This
provoked outrage in China, which turned into several violent
demonstrations, with Japanese stores ransacked across the country.
Some Chinese workers also organized strikes against Japanese
employers.
Economic
ties between Asia’s two biggest economies, which amount to an
annual trade of $340 billion, have also been damaged, with Japanese
businesses withdrawing investment, and Chinese ones looking for
suppliers elsewhere. Some have estimated that Japan has lost up to 1
per cent of GDP as a result of the dispute.
This file aerial shot taken on September 15, 2010 shows the disputed islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China in the East China Sea. (AFP Photo/JIJI Press)
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