The Obama administration on Friday accused a Chinese fighter jet of conducting a "dangerous intercept" of a U.S. Navy surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft off the coast of China in international airspace — the fourth such incident since March.
The Pentagon
press secretary, Rear Adm. John Kirby, said Washington protested to the
Chinese military through diplomatic channels, calling the fighter
pilot's actions "unsafe and unprofessional." And U.S. officials said
this is at least the second formal complaint American diplomats have
filed with the Chinese over these military actions in recent months.
At
a news briefing at Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, where President
Barack Obama is vacationing, Ben Rhodes, deputy national security
adviser for strategic communications, called the intercept "a deeply
concerning provocation" and suggested it could set back efforts to
improve relations.
"What we've
encouraged is constructive military-to-military ties with China, and
this kind of action clearly violates the spirit of that engagement,"
Rhodes told reporters.
U.S.
officials said it appears that the same Chinese military unit out of a
base on Hainan Island was responsible for similar aggressive "close
intercepts" in March, April and May. The officials refused to provide
any details of the previous incidents but said the U.S. filed a similar
formal complaint with the Chinese in May.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the previous incidents publicly.
Kirby
said the Aug. 19 maneuvering by the Chinese jet posed a risk to the
safety of the U.S. air crew, was "inconsistent with customary
international law," and complicates efforts to improve
military-to-military relations, which are often strained.
Kirby
said the Chinese jet made several close passes by the Navy P-8 Poseidon
plane, coming within 30 feet of it at one point. He said the Chinese
jet did a "barrel roll" maneuver over the top of the Poseidon at one
point and also passed across the nose of the Navy plane, exposing the
belly of the fighter in a way apparently designed to show that it was
armed.
Kirby said it happened
about 135 miles east of China's Hainan Island. In 2001 a Chinese jet
collided with a U.S. Navy surveillance aircraft off Hainan Island,
killing the Chinese pilot and forcing the Navy plane to make an
emergency landing on the island. Washington severed military relations
with China after that episode.
The Navy's P-8 Poseidon aircraft are designed for long-range missions including intelligence collection and reconnaissance.
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