Politics
Japanese F-15 tails Chinese jet at close distance
China
made a rare release of video footage and photos on Thursday to show the
risky scene of Japanese aircraft stalking Chinese planes at a
stunningly close distance above the East China Sea.
Experts
observed that the Japanese aircraft were carrying missiles to pose a
blunt threat, and the distance between them was close enough to lead to a
crash.
China's Ministry of National Defense
criticized Japan's accusation that a Chinese military aircraft had
"approached unusually close" to two Japanese warplanes, saying it's "a
thief who cries thief".
Ministry spokesman Geng
Yansheng said that two Japanese F-15 fighter jets intruded into China's
East China Sea Air Defense Identification Zone on Wednesday to conduct
reconnaissance and follow the regular patrol of China's Tu-154 plane.
On
May 24, Japan accused China of sending aircraft to approach Japanese
planes at "an unusually close distance". But China said the two Japanese
aircraft were disturbing an ongoing China-Russia naval drill.
Geng criticized Japan's second accusation within a month as "ignorance of the facts".
What has been done by the Japanese pilots was dangerous and "obviously provocative", Geng said.
The ministry attached links of two video clips of the airspace confrontation on its website.
Zhang
Junshe, a researcher at the People's Liberation Army Naval Military
Studies Research Institute, said the video showed that the Japanese
planes carried missiles and weapons, which is a sort of intimidation and
threat.
Li Jie, a senior professor at the
Naval Military Studies Research Institute of the People's Liberation
Army, said releasing the video footage is a good choice to help present
the facts to the international community.
The
ministry spokesman underscored the detail that "the closest distance was
about 30 meters, which seriously affected the flight safety of the
Chinese aircraft".
Li said 30 meters is an
extremely dangerous distance. "Because both planes were flying at high
speeds, and the two planes would have crashed within a tenth of a second
if one of the pilots makes a wrong move."
Also
on Wednesday, a YS-11EB electronic intelligence aircraft and an OP-3C
surveillance plane from Japan conducted reconnaissance within the
Chinese ADIZ and tailed Chinese planes.
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