07-27-2011, 23:17
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#1
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Area Commander
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: USA-Germany
Posts: 1,574
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China warns US over spy planes
Quote:
China warns US over spy planes
07/28/2011
China has warned the United States that it will "seriously harm" the relationship between the two countries if it continues to fly its spy planes close to the Chinese coast.
The warning comes after it was reported this week that two Chinese Sukhoi-27 fighters had chased a US U-2 reconnaissance jet and had briefly strayed into Taiwanese airspace.
Taiwan confirmed it had dispatched two F-16 fighters to intercept the Chinese jets, which quickly backtracked.
"We demand that the United States respects China's sovereignty and security interests and takes concrete measures to boost a healthy and stable development of military relations," said a spokesman for the Chinese Defence ministry to the Global Times, a state-run newspaper.
The defence ministry called on the US to halt the flights, calling them a "major obstacle" to good relations and saying that they had "severely harmed" mutual trust.
The US seems unlikely to bow to the demands. Admiral Mike Mullen, the chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, insisted in the wake of the latest incident that the US would continue to fly operations in international airspace.
"The Chinese would see us move out of there," he said. "We're not going to do that, from my perspective. These reconnaissance flights are important." China has long objected to the US monitoring of its coastline, especially after a US spy plane and People's Liberation Army jet collided in 2001 near Hainan island, killing a Chinese pilot. In a major diplomatic row, the crew of the US plane was detained for 11 days.
Military ties between the US and China have been rocky and continue to be strained by US arms sales to Taiwan. A decision on whether to sell the island 66 new F-16 jets is due by the beginning of October.
The US has said it wants greater military transparency from China over its military modernisation, and has warned about China's growing missile and cyber capabilities.
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worl...py-planes.html
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akv is offline
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07-27-2011, 23:52
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#2
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Consigliere
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Free Pineland (at last)
Posts: 8,827
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Lord forbid we suggest they stop spying on us too . . .
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Roguish Lawyer is offline
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07-28-2011, 05:38
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#3
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: NorCal
Posts: 15,370
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The pol-mil chessboard - and the games go on...
China's Military Flexes Its Muscle
USAToday, 28 Jul 2011
As the Pentagon plans for U.S. forces to exit Iraq and Afghanistan, it is keeping one eye trained on the rising threat in the East. For two decades China has been adding large numbers of warships, submarines, fighter jets and — more significantly — developing offensive missiles capable of knocking out U.S. stealth aircraft and the biggest U.S. naval ships including aircraft carriers.
At the same time, China has announced that its territorial waters extend hundreds of miles beyond its shores, well into what its neighbors and the United States consider international waters. It has installed more than 1,000 ballistic missiles aimed at Taiwan, a democratic island nation and U.S. ally. Vietnam, the Philippines and Japan all have complained to the United States about confrontations on the high seas with China.
China says it is simply developing defensive weapons and protecting its interests. But military analysts say the United States appears to be taking a different view, citing the Pentagon's development of a new class of bombers that can fly for long periods outside of the reach of radar.
The Long Range Strike Bomber "is a deterrent to those who would seek to deny our access," says Air Force Maj. Gen. Noel Jones, director of operational capability requirements for the Air Force.
Jones doesn't mention China as the potential adversary for the bomber. He doesn't have to, says Roger Cliff, an independent defense researcher, specialist on China and former Pentagon official.
(cont'd) http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2...military_n.htm
And so it goes...
Richard
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