The encounter comes a week after China scrambled fighter jets as a
U.S. Navy ship sailed close to a disputed reef in the South China Sea.
Two Chinese fighter jets carried out an "unsafe" intercept of a U.S. military reconnaissance aircraft over the South China Sea, the Pentagon said on Wednesday, drawing a rebuke from Beijing, which demanded that Washington end surveillance near China.
The
incident, likely to increase tension in and around the contested
waterway, took place in international airspace on Tuesday as the U.S.
maritime patrol aircraft carried out "a routine U.S. patrol," a Pentagon statement said.
The
encounter comes a week after China scrambled fighter jets as a U.S.
Navy ship sailed close to a disputed reef in the South China Sea.
Another Chinese intercept took place in 2014 when a Chinese fighter pilot flew acrobatic maneuvers around a U.S. spy plane.
The intercept occurred days before President Barack Obama travels to parts of Asia from May 21-28, including a Group of Seven summit in Japan and his first trip to Vietnam.
China
claims most of the South China Sea, through which $5 trillion in
ship-borne trade passes every year. The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia,
Taiwan and Brunei have overlapping claims.
Washington
has accused Beijing of militarizing the South China Sea after creating
artificial islands, while Beijing, in turn, has criticized increased
U.S. naval patrols and exercises in Asia.
The Pentagon statement said the Department of Defense was addressing the issue through military and diplomatic channels.
"ENDANGERING SECURITY"
China's
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said the U.S. statement was "not
true" and that the aircraft had been engaging in reconnaissance close to
China's island province of Hainan.
"It must
be pointed out that U.S. military planes frequently carry out
reconnaissance in Chinese coastal waters, seriously endangering Chinese
maritime security," Hong told reporters at a regular press briefing on Thursday.
"We
demand that the United States immediately cease this type of close
reconnaissance activity to avoid having this sort of incident happening
again," Hong said, adding that the actions of the Chinese aircraft were "completely in keeping with safety and professional standards".
"They maintained safe behavior and did not engage in any dangerous action," Hong said.
China's Defense Ministry said in a fax that it was looking into reports on the incident.
The Pentagon has yet to release the precise location of the encounter.
SIGNAL OF DISPLEASURE?
In
2015, the United States and China announced agreements on a military
hotline and rules of behavior to govern air-to-air encounters called the
Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea (CUES).
"This is exactly the type of irresponsible and dangerous intercepts that the air-to-air annex to CUES is supposed to prevent,"
said Greg Poling, director of the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative
at Washington's Center for Strategic and International Studies
think-tank.
Poling said either some part of China's airforce "hadn't gotten the message", or it was meant as a signal of displeasure with recent U.S. freedom of navigation actions in the South China Sea.
"If the latter, it would be very disappointing to find China sacrificing the CUES annex for political gamesmanship."
Zhang
Baohui, a security expert at Hong Kong's Lingnan University, said he
believed the encounter highlighted the limitation of CUES, and shows
that Chinese pilots would still fly close to U.S. surveillance planes if
needed.
"Frankly, we're always going to see
these kinds of incidents as China will always put the priority on
national security over something like CUES whenever it feels its
interests are directly threatened," he said.
While
the precise location of the encounter is not yet known, regional
military attaches and experts say the southern Chinese coast is a
military area of increasing sensitivity for Beijing.
Its
submarine bases on Hainan are home to an expanding fleet of
nuclear-armed submarines and a big target for on-going Western
surveillance operations.
The Guangdong coast is
also believed to be home to some of China's most advanced missiles,
including the DF-21D anti-ship weapon.
The
Pentagon last month called on China to reaffirm it has no plans to
deploy military aircraft in the Spratly Islands after China used a
military plane to evacuate sick workers from Fiery Cross Reef, where it
has built a 3,000 metre (9,800 ft) runway.
In
April 2001, an intercept of a U.S. spy plane by a Chinese fighter jet
resulted in a collision that killed the Chinese pilot and forced the
American plane to make an emergency landing at a base on Hainan.
The
24 U.S. air crew members were held for 11 days until Washington
apologized for the incident. That encounter soured U.S.-Chinese
relations in the early days of President George W. Bush's first
administration.
Last month, the Pentagon said that Russia had intercepted a U.S. Air Force aircraft over the Baltic Sea in an "unsafe and unprofessional" way.
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