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2 Chinese Fighters Entered South Korea's Air Defense Identification Zone

Zarvan

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South Korea authorities said on Tuesday that two Chinese fighters had entered South Korea’s air defense identification zone (ADIZ) in the East China Sea, near Jeju Island. South Korea responded to the incident by scrambling fighters.

According to Jeon Ha-kyu, a spokesman for South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), the incident occurred on Sunday. The Chinese jets left South Korea’s ADIZ after receiving a warning message. ”We took necessary surveillance and tactical measures adequately,” he said.

It’s unclear if the jets were operating in that airspace as part of a regularly scheduled patrol or exercise, or if the incident was an intentional attempt to signal China’s assertion of its own ADIZ in that area. In November 2013, China declared an ADIZ in the East China Sea that partially overlapped with South Korea’s zone.

In its report, Yonhap suggested that the incident could have been an attempt by China to express its displeasure with renewed momentum between the United States and South Korea toward the latter’s adoption of Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) systems. On Friday, a South Korean official said that THAAD would be helpful for South Korea’s defense.

The THAAD issue has reemerged at the forefront of the U.S.-South Korea alliance after Pyongyang’s nuclear test earlier this month and amid expectations that North Korea is gearing up for a long-range ballistic missile test later this month.

China vehemently rejects the implementation of THAAD in South Korea. Reiterating the Chinese government’s position on the matter last week, Hua Chunying, a spokesperson for the Chinese foreign ministry urged South Korea to “take into account others’ security interests as well as regional peace and stability.” She further urged “relevant countries” to use “caution,” noting that the “situation on the Korean Peninsula is highly sensitive.”

As I discussed early last year, diplomatic rhetoric between Seoul and Beijing has gotten exceptionally heated over the THAAD issue, despite an otherwise good working diplomatic relationship. Kim Min-seok, a South Korean spokesman for the defense ministry, cautioned China that while “a neighboring country can have its own opinion on the possible deployment of the THAAD system here by the U.S. forces in South Korea … it should not try to influence our security policy.”

The overlapping ADIZ issue between the two countries has largely not been addressed in a serious bilateral setting, barring a brief high-level meeting in late 2013. South Korea expanded its ADIZ in December 2013, days after China announced the creation of its ADIZ. The newly expanded ADIZ covered Ieodo, a submerged rock, that sits in the overlapping exclusive economic zones of China and South Korea.

http://thediplomat.com/2016/02/2-ch...al&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer
 
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1 Y-9 and 1 Y-8



2 Chinese planes breach Korea's air defense zone
2016-02-02 : 16:04
By Kang Seung-woo


160202_p01_chinese.jpg

Two Chinese military aircraft briefly intruded into the Korea Air Defense Identification Zone (KADIZ), Sunday, according to the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), Tuesday.

“A Chinese military surveillance aircraft and an early warning plane flew into the KADIZ over Ieodo, a submerged rock in the East China Sea without prior notice,” the JCS said.

Ieodo, some 150 kilometers southwest off Jeju Island, is the subject of a territorial dispute between South Korea and China.

Right after the Chinese planes entered the zone, the Korean military issued a warning to the pilots of the infiltrating aircraft and ordered ROK Air Force fighters to be on stand-by alert. The pilots reportedly identified themselves as Chinese and immediately flew out of the area.

After leaving KADIZ, the aircraft also violated Japan’s air defense zone, travelling south of Tsushima Island and Japan’s Air Self-Defense Force scrambled fighters in response, according to Japanese reports.

This was the first time that Chinese military planes have flown into the KADIZ without giving advance notice, triggering speculation that the flight was a show of force against Seoul’s move toward accepting the deployment of an advanced U.S. missile interceptor on Korean soil.

The air defense identification zone is not a country’s territorial airspace, but was established outside the territorial airspace for the purpose of identifying air traffic and to enable early warnings, by asking aircraft entering it zone to identify themselves and submit flight plans.

Japan’s Ministry of Defense said that the planes did not intrude into its airspace. The JCS declined to comment on what China’s intentions were regarding the flights.

However, a military official said that the incident may reflect China’s concerns about talks between Seoul and Washington on the deployment of the terminal high-altitude area defense (THAAD) on the peninsula.

The Chinese government has urged Korea to avoid having THAAD deployed here, claiming that it could be a threat to China’s security.

“The flight must have been carried out intentionally because there is little chance that state-of-the-art military planes could mistakenly take a wrong route,” the official said.

“Through the flight, China appears to be flexing its military muscle against THAAD deployment.”

Japan’s Mainichi Shimbun said that China may have flown them to collect information on Japanese Aegis destroyers which are in service to target any North Korea ballistic missiles heading for Japan.

Last week, the Korean defense ministry said that the Kim Jong-un regime may soon test a long-range ballistic missile amid increased activity at its northwestern launch site.

Korea expanded the zone in 2013 to counter China’s unilateral declaration of its own air defense identification zone that overlaps with KADIZ and covers Ieodo, part of Korean territory located southwest of Jeju Island.
 
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1 Y-9 and 1 Y-8



2 Chinese planes breach Korea's air defense zone
2016-02-02 : 16:04
By Kang Seung-woo


160202_p01_chinese.jpg

Two Chinese military aircraft briefly intruded into the Korea Air Defense Identification Zone (KADIZ), Sunday, according to the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), Tuesday.

“A Chinese military surveillance aircraft and an early warning plane flew into the KADIZ over Ieodo, a submerged rock in the East China Sea without prior notice,” the JCS said.

Ieodo, some 150 kilometers southwest off Jeju Island, is the subject of a territorial dispute between South Korea and China.

Right after the Chinese planes entered the zone, the Korean military issued a warning to the pilots of the infiltrating aircraft and ordered ROK Air Force fighters to be on stand-by alert. The pilots reportedly identified themselves as Chinese and immediately flew out of the area.

After leaving KADIZ, the aircraft also violated Japan’s air defense zone, travelling south of Tsushima Island and Japan’s Air Self-Defense Force scrambled fighters in response, according to Japanese reports.

This was the first time that Chinese military planes have flown into the KADIZ without giving advance notice, triggering speculation that the flight was a show of force against Seoul’s move toward accepting the deployment of an advanced U.S. missile interceptor on Korean soil.

The air defense identification zone is not a country’s territorial airspace, but was established outside the territorial airspace for the purpose of identifying air traffic and to enable early warnings, by asking aircraft entering it zone to identify themselves and submit flight plans.

Japan’s Ministry of Defense said that the planes did not intrude into its airspace. The JCS declined to comment on what China’s intentions were regarding the flights.

However, a military official said that the incident may reflect China’s concerns about talks between Seoul and Washington on the deployment of the terminal high-altitude area defense (THAAD) on the peninsula.

The Chinese government has urged Korea to avoid having THAAD deployed here, claiming that it could be a threat to China’s security.

“The flight must have been carried out intentionally because there is little chance that state-of-the-art military planes could mistakenly take a wrong route,” the official said.

“Through the flight, China appears to be flexing its military muscle against THAAD deployment.”

Japan’s Mainichi Shimbun said that China may have flown them to collect information on Japanese Aegis destroyers which are in service to target any North Korea ballistic missiles heading for Japan.

Last week, the Korean defense ministry said that the Kim Jong-un regime may soon test a long-range ballistic missile amid increased activity at its northwestern launch site.

Korea expanded the zone in 2013 to counter China’s unilateral declaration of its own air defense identification zone that overlaps with KADIZ and covers Ieodo, part of Korean territory located southwest of Jeju Island.

wow...so China also has territorial dispute with S.Korea??:o:
Never knew that.....old boy......East Asia is saturated with territorial disputes.....jeez....:sick:
 
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wow...so China also has territorial dispute with S.Korea??:o:
Never knew that.....old boy......East Asia is saturated with territorial disputes.....jeez....:sick:

China made violation to most of their major neighbors, you know?

Daily, their fishermen get caught illegal fishing nearly everywhere. By Russian, South/North Korea, Japan, Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesian, USA, Argentina ..

tau-ca-trung-quoc-bi-tuan-duyen-my-bat-giu.jpg
 
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China made violation to most of their major neighbors, you know?

Daily, their fishermen get caught illegal fishing nearly everywhere. By Russian, South/North Korea, Japan, Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesian, USA, Argentina ..

tau-ca-trung-quoc-bi-tuan-duyen-my-bat-giu.jpg


Really? Illegal Vietnamese fishermen get their boats blown up by Indonesia on a daily basis. I put up the link, but you troll have been banned from East Asia section.

:lol:
 
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China made violation to most of their major neighbors, you know?

Daily, their fishermen get caught illegal fishing nearly everywhere. By Russian, South/North Korea, Japan, Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesian, USA, Argentina ..

USA? And Argentina? I am wondering what kind of boats they were sailing. What don't you say they got caught of illegal mining on the moon?
 
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What is this Double Standards? So when the US drops by in the SCS it's a huge deal but when China does it to its neighbors...ssshh. :ph34r:

Where's those ego's at?
 
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wow...so China also has territorial dispute with S.Korea??:o:
Never knew that.....old boy......East Asia is saturated with territorial disputes.....jeez....:sick:


ADIZ has nothing to do with "territorial dispute". Korean are not accusing Chinese violating their sovereign air space.

What is this Double Standards? So when the US drops by in the SCS it's a huge deal but when China does it to its neighbors...ssshh. :ph34r:

Where's those ego's at?


You seem to be confused ADIZ with sovereign territorial water and space.
 
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ADIZ has nothing to do with "territorial dispute". Korean are not accusing Chinese violating their sovereign air space.




You seem to be confused ADIZ with sovereign territorial water and space.
A lot of people are bro. It's not the first time here or the last.
 
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South Korean need to look up the definition of ADIZ instead of treating it like it's their own airspace. In addition, they had not consulted China when they unilaterally established that ADIZ, thus it's not recognized.
 
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