The Pentagon has concluded that an intercept of a US military aircraft by Chinese fighter jets
last week over the South China Sea violated an agreement the two governments
signed last year, a US
defense official said on Thursday.
The Pentagon findings contradict what the Chinese Defense
Ministry said earlier in the day.
Last year, the United States
and China
announced an agreement establishing rules of behavior to govern air-to-air
encounters and creating a military hotline.
"The review of the Chinese intercept of one of our
reconnaissance aircraft has assessed the intercept to have been unsafe based
upon the Memorandum of Understanding with China and International Civil
Aviation Organization standards," US Defense Department spokesman Bill
Urban told Reuters.
The incident took place in international airspace last week
as a US military plane
carried out "a routine US
patrol," the Pentagon said.
Two Chinese J-11 fighter jets flew within 50 feet of the US
EP-3 aircraft, a US
defense official said at the time. The official said the incident took place
east of Hainan Island .
The incident came at a time of heightened Sino-American
tensions in the South China Sea . China claims
most of the area, through which $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes every
year. The Philippines , Vietnam , Malaysia ,
Taiwan and Brunei have
overlapping claims.
Chinese Defense Ministry spokesman Yang Yujun told a news
briefing on Thursday that China 's
aircraft acted completely professionally and in line with an agreement reached
between the countries on rules governing such encounters.
However, he said the agreement could only provide a
"technical standard", and the best way of resolving the problem was
for the US
to stop such flights.
Urban said the two governments discussed the intercept at
this week’s Military Maritime Consultative Agreement talks in Hawaii . "The United
States has expressed our concern to China ," he
said.
The agreement on rules of behavior for air-to-air encounters
signed last year was broad in scope, addressing everything from the correct
radio frequencies to use during distress calls to the wrong physical behaviors
to use during crises.
Last week, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook told reporters that
it was unclear if China
violated the agreement but that their actions were "unsafe."
http://interaksyon.com/article/128304/china-aircraft-intercept-violated-2015-agreement---us
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