China
Flies Bombers and Drone Near Japanese Skies
10
September, 2013
The
Japanese Self-Defense Forces were on a high
state of alert on
September 9 ahead of the first anniversary of Japan’s controversial
purchase
of islets in the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu archipelago, particularly
after a pair of Chinese bombers flew near Okinawa the previous day.
Japanese
Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera has ordered military personnel to
strengthen their surveillance around the Senkakus, which are also
claimed by China and Taiwan. A source in the Japanese government
indicated that the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and Chinese
maritime enforcement could take “outstanding” action in the area
on September 11, the first anniversary of the purchase.
The
“nationalization” of three of the five islets comprising the
Senkakus in 2012 sparked large-scale protests across China, which
also claims ownership of the oil- and natural-gas-rich area. Beijing
retaliated against Japan’s attempted nationalization of the islets
by increasing the frequency of naval patrols in the area, raising
fears of accidental clashes and escalation.
Meanwhile,
the Japanese Defense Ministry confirmed
in a statement that it had scrambled fighter aircraft on September 8
to shadow two Chinese Xian H-6 bombers that were observed between the
main island of southern Okinawa and Miyakojima, an area that Chinese
vessels have often used to transit into the Pacific Ocean to conduct
exercises. The bombers reportedly did not violate Japanese airspace.
The
H-6 is based on the Soviet-built Tupolev Tu-16 Badger. A newer
variant comes equipped with intermediate-range cruise missiles.
Itsunori
nevertheless described the flight as “unusual” and called for
vigilance two days prior to Wednesday’s anniversary. The Chinese
Ministry of National Defense confirmed
on Monday that the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) aircraft
had recently headed for the West Pacific for routine exercises, which
it said were not aimed at any specific country.
Separately,
Japan also confirmed
that two Chinese warships — Type 054A frigates Yiyang
and Changzhou
— were observed approximately 100 km northeast of Miyakojima on
September 9 heading from the Pacific into the East China Sea.
In
another “unusual
incident,”
an unidentified unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) was spotted
near the Senkakus around noon on September 9. The Air
Self-Defence Force dispatched combat aircraft to intercept the drone,
whose origin has yet to be confirmed. A Defense Ministry official
said the UAV, which never entered Japanese airspace, had come from
the northwest and was seen returning in that direction. This was the
first reported incident of this kind.
Based
on image analysis and unconfirmed reports, the drone is believed to
have been a BZK-005
medium/high-altitude long-range unmanned reconnaissance UAV from the
PLA.
Asked
to comment on the incident, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong
Lei intially said
he was unaware of the situation. The PLA later confirmed that the UAV
belonged to China and said it was on a routine mission.
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