File photo of a US Navy P8-A Poseidon surveillance plane. REUTERS
A top US Navy officer said this week that
US surveillance flights from a country such as Malaysia would likely increase friction with Beijing . Malaysia and China
have competing territorial claims in the South China Sea, and Beijing
has been pressing the United
States to halt flights near its coast after
an incident in international air space last month.
Admiral Jonathan Greenert, the US
chief of naval operations, said in remarks in Washington
on Monday that "recently the Malaysians have offered us to fly detachments
of P-8s out of ... East Malaysia ,"
referring to the Navy's new anti-submarine and reconnaissance aircraft.
A spokesman for Greenert, Navy Captain Danny Hernandez,
clarified the comments on Friday, saying Greenert had not said that any P-8
flights from Malaysia
had been approved or that there was an agreement to do so.
"The CNO did not talk about approving flights. What he
was discussing was nurturing future opportunities, like responding to emerging
issues in the region, which was done with MH370 search operations,"
Hernandez told Reuters.
The Malaysian government allowed the Navy to operate P-8 and
P-3 surveillance aircraft from the country during the search for Malaysia
Airlines Flight 370, which disappeared in March on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing .
The US Navy does not have a formal agreement to fly military
aircraft from Malaysia but
has done so for years, with approval from Kuala
Lumpur on a case-by-case basis.
The State Department said on Friday the United States had "no plans for a permanent
presence in Malaysia "
and added: "any US
military engagement in Malaysia
is with the permission and the full cooperation of the Malaysian
government."
Greenert made his remarks to a forum at the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace think tank. He said Malaysia , Indonesia
and Singapore were key to
the long-term US policy of a
US
political and military rebalance to the Asia Pacific region.
The US
rebalance has raised Chinese concerns that Washington is trying to contain its economic
and military growth. While the two countries have tried to improve
military-to-military ties, there have been occasional frictions.
Earlier this week, top US and China
security officials disagreed over the incident and a top Chinese official urged
the United States
to halt surveillance flights near its coast
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/95296/us-says-malaysia-offers-to-host-spy-planes-that-irk-china
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