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China Protests Alleged US Spy Plane Incursion in ‘No Fly Zone’ During Drills

“This was a naked act of provocation,” said Beijing’s Ministry of National Defence, as relations with US plunge to a low.
China Protests Alleged US Spy Plane Incursion

Beijing: China is protesting the alleged incursion of  a U.S. Air Force U-2 spy plane into a no-fly zone imposed during live-fire military exercises in the country's north.

In a statement issued late on Tuesday, the Ministry of National Defence said the action had “seriously interfered in normal exercise activities” and “severely incurred the risk of misjudgment and even of bringing about an unintended air-sea incident.”

“This was a naked act of provocation,” the ministry said, quoting spokesperson Wu Qian. China has lodged a stern protest and demanded the US cease such actions, Wu said.

The statement said the exercises were being staged by China's Northern Theatre Command but gave no details as to their exact time and place. However, the Maritime Safety Administration had announced drills that started on Monday and run through September 30 over the Bohai Gulf, East of Beijing, an area under the northern command.

Relations between the US and China have sunk to their lowest in decades amid disputes over a myriad of issues including trade, technology, Taiwan and the South China Sea.

The high-altitude reconnaissance planes were flown over China, the former Soviet Union and other countries in the communist bloc during the Cold War and upgraded versions to continue to support missions in Asia and elsewhere.

China is also staging naval drills in the South China Sea, which it claims virtually in its entirety but over which five other governments also exercise claims. China objects to all US military activity in and over the strategic waterway, especially “freedom of navigation operations" during which US Navy ships sail near to Chinese-held islands.

The defence ministry also announced earlier this month that the Eastern Theatre Command held integrated “combat exercises" in the Taiwan Strait and surrounding waters.

The ministry characterised those drills as a “necessary move responding to the current security situation in the Taiwan Strait and were meant to safeguard national sovereignty."

China claims Taiwan, a self-governing democracy and close US ally, as a part of its territory and threatens to use military force to bring it under its control. Washington and Taipei have increased military and governmental contacts in recent years and this month, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar became the highest-ranking US official to visit Taiwan, prompting a Chinese protest.

The Eastern Theatre Command will “stay on high alert and take all necessary measures to fight against provocations and protect national sovereignty and territorial integrity," the ministry quoted command spokesperson, Senior Colonel Zhang Chunhui, as saying.

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