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After Challenges, China Appears to Backpedal on Air Zone

It is interesting to see all these cheerleaders here.

If any of you understand anything about strategy, you would applaud what China is doing.

China is playing Long Game. China doesn't need to show to the world how big its wiener is right this moment. It is using what we call a creeping strategy.

You see, now these countries that oppose the newly established zone including the US, Japan and S.Korea are referring to it as the Chinese ADIZ. In other words, the zone is being recognized. This is Step One.

When somebody walks across your lawn doesn't mean that you should shoot him with a 12 gauge like Clint Eastwood.

Read some expert opinions in the papers rather foaning in the mouth cheering. It will do you good.
 
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It is interesting to see all these cheerleaders here.

If any of you understand anything about strategy, you would applaud what China is doing.

China is playing Long Game. China doesn't need to show to the world how big its wiener is right this moment. It is using what we call a creeping strategy.

You see, now these countries that oppose the newly established zone including the US, Japan and S.Korea are referring to it as the Chinese ADIZ. In other words, the zone is being recognized. This is Step One.

When somebody walks across your lawn doesn't mean that you should shoot him with a 12 gauge like Clint Eastwood.

Read some expert opinions in the papers rather foaning in the mouth cheering. It will do you good.

You are consoling yourself at best. ADIZ means aircrafts need to give flight plans beforehand and maintain two way communication. Failing which china said 'there will be consequences'. Obviously US, Japan, and S Korea showed their middle fingure to china and flew their planes right into ADIZ. Your analogy of someone walking into your lawn is childish and laughable.

If other countries duely recognized ADIZ, china would have become even more emboldened and establised ADIZ in south china sea and over borders with India. Now that china's ballon is burst it will think twice before doing something like that.

It is not a creeping strategy as you call it. It is a acute strategy that backfired. china is NOT invincible as CCP leaders and its fanboys may have thought !
 
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You are consoling yourself at best. ADIZ means aircrafts need to give flight plans beforehand and maintain two way communication. Failing which china said 'there will be consequences'. Obviously US, Japan, and S Korea showed their middle fingure to china and flew their planes right into ADIZ. Your analogy of someone walking into your lawn is childish and laughable.

If other countries duely recognized ADIZ, china would have become even more emboldened and establised ADIZ in south china sea and over borders with India. Now that china's ballon is burst it will think twice before doing something like that.

It is not a creeping strategy as you call it. It is a acute strategy that backfired. china is NOT invincible as CCP leaders and its fanboys may have thought !

No one is expected to follow the ADIZ. The Chinese ADIZ overlaps Japanese ADIZ and neither country follow them. This news is made for propaganda and do not reflect the ground reality.
 
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No one is expected to follow the ADIZ. The Chinese ADIZ overlaps Japanese ADIZ and neither country follow them. This news is made for propaganda and do not reflect the ground reality.

That maybe all the true, but it is all about timing.

US showed Chinese their place just one day after they declared their ADIZ. Chinese tried flexing their muscle, Uncle Sam showed them who's the boss!

Now, all Chinese can do is try and spin it to comfort their bruised ego. :usflag:
 
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That maybe all the true, but it is all about timing.

US showed Chinese their place just one day after they declared their ADIZ. Chinese tried flexing their muscle, Uncle Sam showed them who's the boss!

Now, all Chinese can do is try and spin it to comfort their bruised ego. :usflag:

Nah, this is too simple. China probably already calculated this move by B-52. They probably have something down the sleeves for the future.
 
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So basically China Chickened out ??

Well still far to go before they can boss east Asia.
 
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Nah, this is too simple. China probably already calculated this move by B-52. They probably have something down the sleeves for the future.

You implying Chinese knew of this B-52 flight and they announced establishment of ADIZ right before the flight? Highly unlikely.

Chinese were just testing water as to how US would react to this shenanigan, they overplayed their hand. Now they're gonna crawl back in their hole and come out few months later with something else.
 
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Indian is so stupid. We have said over and over again the ADIZ is not territorial airspace and no country can take action and shoot unless it's in national airspace, which extend only to 12 nautical miles from shore. If the US wants to challenge us and embarrass us, perhaps they would ball up and head their flight TOWARD our national airspace. Do you idiot understand this?
 
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@IndoCarib ^^^

Why would I argue with simpletons like you.

Beauty fades, dumb is forever. You are definitely no beauty. What is left is dumb.

China sends warplanes into air defense zone

By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN

409cefea14e16328440f6a7067001878.jpg

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View gallery

FILE - In this Sept. 2, 2012 file photo, the survey ship Koyo Maru, left, chartered by Tokyo city officials, sails around Minamikojima, foreground, Kitakojima, middle right, and Uotsuri, background, the tiny islands in the East China Sea, called Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese. South Korean and Japanese flights through China’s new maritime air defense zone added to the international defiance Thursday, Nov. 28, 2013, of rules Beijing says it has imposed in East China Sea but that neighbors and the U.S. have vowed to ignore. (AP Photo/Kyodo News, File) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT
BEIJING (AP) — China said it sent warplanes into its newly declared maritime air defense zone Thursday, days after the U.S., South Korea and Japan all sent flights through the airspace in defiance of rules Beijing says it has imposed in the East China Sea.

China's air force sent several fighter jets and an early warning aircraft on normal air patrols in the zone, the Xinhua agency reported, citing air force spokesman Shen Jinke.

The report did not specify exactly when the flights were sent or whether they had encountered foreign aircraft. The United States, Japan and South Korea have said they have sent flights through the zone without encountering any Chinese response since Beijing announced the creation of the zone last week.

Shen described Thursday's flights as "a defensive measure and in line with international common practices." He said China's air force would remain on high alert and will take measures to protect the country's airspace.

While China's surprise announcement last week to create the zone initially raised some tensions in the region, analysts say Beijing's motive is not to trigger an aerial confrontation but is a more long-term strategy to solidify claims to disputed territory by simply marking the area as its own.

China's lack of efforts to stop the foreign flights — including two U.S. B-52s that flew through the zone on Tuesday — has been an embarrassment for Beijing. Even some Chinese state media outlets suggested Thursday that Beijing may have mishandled the episodes.

"Beijing needs to reform its information release mechanism to win the psychological battles waged by Washington and Tokyo," the Global Times, a nationalist tabloid published by the Communist Party's flagship People's Daily, said in an editorial.

Without prior notice, Beijing began demanding Saturday that passing aircraft identify themselves and accept Chinese instructions or face consequences in an East China Sea zone that overlaps a similar air defense identification zone overseen by Japan since 1969 and initially part of one set up by the U.S. military.

But when tested just days later by U.S. B-52 flights — with Washington saying it made no effort to comply with China's rules, and would not do so in the future — Beijing merely noted, belatedly, that it had seen the flights and taken no further action.

South Korea's military said Thursday its planes flew through the zone this week without informing China and with no apparent interference. Japan also said its planes have been continuing to fly through it after the Chinese announcement, while the Philippines, locked in an increasingly bitter dispute with Beijing over South China Sea islands, said it also was rejecting China's declaration.

Analysts question China's technical ability to enforce the zone due to a shortage of early warning radar aircraft and in-flight refueling capability. However, many believe that China has a long-term plan to win recognition for the zone with a gradual ratcheting-up of warnings and possibly also eventual enforcement action.

"With regard to activity within the zone, nothing will happen — for a while," said June Teufel Dreyer, a China expert at the University of Miami. "Then the zone will become gradually enforced more strictly. The Japanese will continue to protest, but not much more, to challenge it."

That may wear down Japan and effectively change the status quo, she said.

The zone is seen primarily as China's latest bid to bolster its claim over a string of uninhabited Japanese-controlled islands in the East China Sea — known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China. Beijing has been ratcheting up its sovereignty claims since Tokyo's privatization of the islands last year.

But the most immediate spark for the zone likely was Japan's threat last month to shoot down drones that China says it will send to the islands for mapping expeditions, said Dennis Blasko, an Asia analyst at think tank CNA's China Security Affairs Group and a former Army attache in Beijing.

The zone comes an awkward time. Although Beijing's ties with Tokyo are at rock bottom, it was building good will and mutual trust with Washington following a pair of successful meetings between President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping. However, the zone feud now threatens to overshadow both the visit by Vice President Joe Biden to Beijing next week and one by Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop expected before the end of the year.

China's defense and foreign ministries offered no additional clarification Thursday as to why Beijing failed to respond to the U.S. Air Force flights. Alliance partners the U.S. and Japan together have hundreds of military aircraft in the immediate vicinity.

China on Saturday issued a list of requirements for all foreign aircraft passing through the area, regardless of whether they were headed into Chinese airspace, and said its armed forces would adopt "defensive emergency measures" against aircraft that don't comply.

Beijing said the notifications are needed to help maintain air safety in the zone. However, the fact that China said it had identified and monitored the two U.S. bombers during their Tuesday flight seems to discredit that justification for the zone, said Rory Medcalf, director of the international security program at Australia's Lowy Institute

"This suggests the zone is principally a political move," Medcalf said. "It signals a kind of creeping extension of authority."

Along with concerns about confrontations or accidents involving Chinese fighters and foreign aircraft, the zone's establishment fuels fears of further aggressive moves to assert China's territorial claims — especially in the hotly disputed South China Sea, which Beijing says belongs entirely to it.

Defense Ministry spokesman Yang Yujun confirmed those concerns on Saturday by saying China would establish additional air defense identification zones "at an appropriate time."

For now, however, China's regional strategy is focused mostly on Japan and the island dispute, according to government-backed Chinese scholars.

China will continue piling the pressure on Tokyo until it reverses the decision to nationalize the islands, concedes they are in dispute, and opens up negotiations with Beijing, said Shen Dingli, a regional security expert and director of the Center for American Studies at Shanghai's Fudan University.

"China has no choice but to take counter measures," Shen said. "If Japan continues to reject admitting the disputes, it's most likely that China will take further measures."
 
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@IndoCarib ^^^

Why would I argue with simpletons like you.

Beauty fades, dumb is forever. You are definitely no beauty. What is left is dumb.

China sends warplanes into air defense zone

By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN

409cefea14e16328440f6a7067001878.jpg

.
View gallery

FILE - In this Sept. 2, 2012 file photo, the survey ship Koyo Maru, left, chartered by Tokyo city officials, sails around Minamikojima, foreground, Kitakojima, middle right, and Uotsuri, background, the tiny islands in the East China Sea, called Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese. South Korean and Japanese flights through China’s new maritime air defense zone added to the international defiance Thursday, Nov. 28, 2013, of rules Beijing says it has imposed in East China Sea but that neighbors and the U.S. have vowed to ignore. (AP Photo/Kyodo News, File) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT
BEIJING (AP) — China said it sent warplanes into its newly declared maritime air defense zone Thursday, days after the U.S., South Korea and Japan all sent flights through the airspace in defiance of rules Beijing says it has imposed in the East China Sea.

China's air force sent several fighter jets and an early warning aircraft on normal air patrols in the zone, the Xinhua agency reported, citing air force spokesman Shen Jinke.

The report did not specify exactly when the flights were sent or whether they had encountered foreign aircraft. The United States, Japan and South Korea have said they have sent flights through the zone without encountering any Chinese response since Beijing announced the creation of the zone last week.

Shen described Thursday's flights as "a defensive measure and in line with international common practices." He said China's air force would remain on high alert and will take measures to protect the country's airspace.

While China's surprise announcement last week to create the zone initially raised some tensions in the region, analysts say Beijing's motive is not to trigger an aerial confrontation but is a more long-term strategy to solidify claims to disputed territory by simply marking the area as its own.

China's lack of efforts to stop the foreign flights — including two U.S. B-52s that flew through the zone on Tuesday — has been an embarrassment for Beijing. Even some Chinese state media outlets suggested Thursday that Beijing may have mishandled the episodes.

"Beijing needs to reform its information release mechanism to win the psychological battles waged by Washington and Tokyo," the Global Times, a nationalist tabloid published by the Communist Party's flagship People's Daily, said in an editorial.

Without prior notice, Beijing began demanding Saturday that passing aircraft identify themselves and accept Chinese instructions or face consequences in an East China Sea zone that overlaps a similar air defense identification zone overseen by Japan since 1969 and initially part of one set up by the U.S. military.

But when tested just days later by U.S. B-52 flights — with Washington saying it made no effort to comply with China's rules, and would not do so in the future — Beijing merely noted, belatedly, that it had seen the flights and taken no further action.

South Korea's military said Thursday its planes flew through the zone this week without informing China and with no apparent interference. Japan also said its planes have been continuing to fly through it after the Chinese announcement, while the Philippines, locked in an increasingly bitter dispute with Beijing over South China Sea islands, said it also was rejecting China's declaration.

Analysts question China's technical ability to enforce the zone due to a shortage of early warning radar aircraft and in-flight refueling capability. However, many believe that China has a long-term plan to win recognition for the zone with a gradual ratcheting-up of warnings and possibly also eventual enforcement action.

"With regard to activity within the zone, nothing will happen — for a while," said June Teufel Dreyer, a China expert at the University of Miami. "Then the zone will become gradually enforced more strictly. The Japanese will continue to protest, but not much more, to challenge it."

That may wear down Japan and effectively change the status quo, she said.

The zone is seen primarily as China's latest bid to bolster its claim over a string of uninhabited Japanese-controlled islands in the East China Sea — known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China. Beijing has been ratcheting up its sovereignty claims since Tokyo's privatization of the islands last year.

But the most immediate spark for the zone likely was Japan's threat last month to shoot down drones that China says it will send to the islands for mapping expeditions, said Dennis Blasko, an Asia analyst at think tank CNA's China Security Affairs Group and a former Army attache in Beijing.

The zone comes an awkward time. Although Beijing's ties with Tokyo are at rock bottom, it was building good will and mutual trust with Washington following a pair of successful meetings between President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping. However, the zone feud now threatens to overshadow both the visit by Vice President Joe Biden to Beijing next week and one by Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop expected before the end of the year.

China's defense and foreign ministries offered no additional clarification Thursday as to why Beijing failed to respond to the U.S. Air Force flights. Alliance partners the U.S. and Japan together have hundreds of military aircraft in the immediate vicinity.

China on Saturday issued a list of requirements for all foreign aircraft passing through the area, regardless of whether they were headed into Chinese airspace, and said its armed forces would adopt "defensive emergency measures" against aircraft that don't comply.

Beijing said the notifications are needed to help maintain air safety in the zone. However, the fact that China said it had identified and monitored the two U.S. bombers during their Tuesday flight seems to discredit that justification for the zone, said Rory Medcalf, director of the international security program at Australia's Lowy Institute

"This suggests the zone is principally a political move," Medcalf said. "It signals a kind of creeping extension of authority."

Along with concerns about confrontations or accidents involving Chinese fighters and foreign aircraft, the zone's establishment fuels fears of further aggressive moves to assert China's territorial claims — especially in the hotly disputed South China Sea, which Beijing says belongs entirely to it.

Defense Ministry spokesman Yang Yujun confirmed those concerns on Saturday by saying China would establish additional air defense identification zones "at an appropriate time."

For now, however, China's regional strategy is focused mostly on Japan and the island dispute, according to government-backed Chinese scholars.

China will continue piling the pressure on Tokyo until it reverses the decision to nationalize the islands, concedes they are in dispute, and opens up negotiations with Beijing, said Shen Dingli, a regional security expert and director of the Center for American Studies at Shanghai's Fudan University.

"China has no choice but to take counter measures," Shen said. "If Japan continues to reject admitting the disputes, it's most likely that China will take further measures."


Beauty fades, dumb is forever. In your case what remains is the empty Chair !! :rofl:

China sends warplanes now for what ?? To Catch see gulls ?? The Americans , Japs and the Koreans have penetrated you and left already.
 
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The Chinese who decided to install this air defense zone wasn't thinking.. They should know that we would test this by flying our plane over it.. If they have no plan to shot down an American plane why even establish a air defense zone.. This will just make them look weak as they are force to back down. I'm thinking there will be some demotion after the dust is settle.
 
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The Chinese who decided to install this air defense zone wasn't thinking.. They should know that we would test this by flying our plane over it.. If they have no plan to shot down an American plane why even establish a air defense zone.. This will just make them look weak as they are force to back down.

Now that Chinese aircraft patrolling the the air defense zone, this is the time Japanese, Koreans and US to show their muscle. Lets see if they are up for direct confrontation?
 
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United States responds to Chinese 'air identification zone' over Japanese-claimed islands by sending B-52 bombers

THREE days ago China declared a no-fly zone over waters claimed by Japan. Yesterday, the US flew bombers over them. Today, China has sent in an aircraft carrier. Are these the drums of war on our doorstep?

Late yesterday Australian time, two US B-52 bombers flew over the Senkaku/Diaoyou island chain in the East China Sea –a deliberately provocative act in response to a freshly declared “air identification zone”.

In response, China has ordered its only aircraft carrier - the PNAS Liaoning - into the disputed waters.

This afternoon, China's defence ministry said it "monitored'' the US B-52 bomber flights in its newly-declared air defence identification zone

In a statement China's defence spokesman Geng Yansheng said: "The Chinese military monitored the entire process, carried out identification in a timely manner, and ascertained the type of US aircraft.

"China is capable of exercising effective control over this airspace,'' Geng added.

463186-liaoning.jpg

The Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning and four escorting warships have been sent towards disputed waters after the United States sent B-52 bombers over one of several disputed island chains yesterday.

The statement, China's first official response to the US action, appeared to be an effort to avoid confrontation while also asserting its authority.

The carrier battlegroup is destined for the Scarborough shoal, claimed by Manila and just 200km from the Philippines, last year.

Once there the warships will conduct "scientific experiments" and "military exercises" , the Chinese website sina.com.cn says.

It's a major escalation of tensions over several sets of islands which have been brewing for decades, but has reached boiling point in the past week.

The Chinese navy has announce the aircraft carrier has put to sea from the port of Qingdao with an escort of two destroyers and two frigates. It's destination: "Routine training exercises" that happens to be in disputed waters of the South China Sea.

156136-b-52.jpg

B-52 bomber aeroplane arriving in Fairford, Gloucestershire. The United States has sent two of these bombers into airspace disputed by Japan and China after China declared the Senkaku/Diaoyou island chain an "Air Identification Zone"

“This is the first time since the Liaoning entered service that it has carried out long-term drills on the high seas,” an official Chinese naval website declares.

"Other nations do not need to be alarmed," said Zhang Junshe, an expert with the navy, in an interview with China's English language news agency Xinhua.

What is their significance?

The confrontations have all the “red flags” of impending conflict: Disputed territory. Powerful nations. Bluffs and counter-bluffs. Bravado.

It also has another vital ingredient: Gas.

916283-lianong.jpg

Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning cruises for a test in late last year. The flagship and an escort of four warships is on its way to disputed waters in yet another escalation with Japan, China, Taiwan and the Philippines.

The dispute over the Senkaku island chain is not new. And it is just one set of islands on the western Pacific Rim over which China and its neighbours have been bickering for decades.

Why? Probably because the adjacent waters contain as-yet untapped oil and gas fields.

Who gets to exploit these resources will be determined by who owns these islands.

On November 23, China threw fuel on the diplomatic fire that has been growing between it and Japan all year. It declared a new “Air Defence Identification Zone” over a broad swathe of the East China Sea. This happens to include the air over the islands Japan considers its own.

Chinese authorities have said any intruding aircraft are subject to "emergency military measures" if they do not identify themselves or obey Beijing's orders

803085-japanese-navy.jpg

The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) destroyer Kurama leads other vessels during a fleet review in Sagami Bay, south of Tokyo. Japanese and Chinese naval vessels have been playing an escalating game of bluff in disputed waters for several months.

US escalation

The unarmed US bombers took off from Guam yesterday as part of a "previously scheduled" and “routine exercise” in the area, US defence officials said.

A US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed to AFP the two planes were B-52 bombers.

``Last night we conducted a training exercise that was long-planned. It involved two aircraft flying from Guam and returning to Guam,'' Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steven Warren told reporters.

No flight plan was submitted beforehand to the Chinese and the mission went ahead ``without incident,'' with the two aircraft spending ``less than an hour'' in the unilaterally-declared Air Defence Identification Zone (ADIZ), Warren said.

155827-senkaku-diaoyou-island-chain.jpg

What's the fuss? The tiny and somewhat featureless Senkaku/Diaoyou island chain holds is at the centre of a territorial dispute by Japan and China because of nearby gas reserves. Picture: Google

A cascade of rising tensions

This is just the latest escalation. In the past year, more and more research vessels and – more ominously – warships have been deliberately sent into the disputed zone.

Japan suddenly “nationalised” the Senkaku islands in September. It was an open declaration that Japan considered the islands part of its “mainland” and would not tolerate any continued claims.

China was incensed. It immediately cancelled all official visits and imposed boycotts on Japanese products. It also sent ships and planes to the islands in a show of force.

In response, Japan mobilised vessels and aircraft, raising fears the tensions could trigger an accidental clash.

894235-aptopix-china-aircraft-carrier.jpg

A carrier-borne J-15 fighter jet lands on China's first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning. The ship and its air group are being sent into disputed waters after the United States sent bomber aircraft into the area to test China's resolve over a new "no fly" zone.

China's newly expanded air defense zone is just the latest development. The zone also includes waters claimed by Taiwan and South Korea, which also have both expressed their displeasure at Beijing's move.

Under the rules unilaterally declared by China, all aircraft are expected to provide a flight plan, clearly mark their nationality and maintain two-way radio communication to allow them to respond to identification inquiries from Chinese authorities.

This "overlaps" airspace over which Japan claims the same right.

"The air defense zone set up by Japan over the Diaoyu Islands is illegal, as the islands belong to China and the airspace over them is China's territorial airspace, rather than part of the air defense zone of another country," a Chinese navy spokesman said.

Now the United States has waded into the diplomatic game of high-stakes poker.

163081-b-52.jpg

A B-52 bomber drops bombs and flares during a training exercise: Picture US Department of Defence

International reaction

Japan, the United States and several other governments sharply criticized China's move.

Australia earlier this week summoned Beijing's ambassador to express its opposition and Tokyo called on airlines to refuse to accept China's demands to abide by new rules when flying into the zone.

Pentagon officials said the United States views the area as international air space and American military aircraft would operate in the zone as before without submitting flight plans to China in advance.

Without taking sides in the territorial feud, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon meanwhile called on China and Japan to negotiate an end to their dispute.

Ban on Tuesday said tensions should be handled ``amicably through dialogue and negotiations.''
 
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The Chinese who decided to install this air defense zone wasn't thinking.. They should know that we would test this by flying our plane over it.. If they have no plan to shot down an American plane why even establish a air defense zone.. This will just make them look weak as they are force to back down. I'm thinking there will be some demotion after the dust is settle.

What is the Chinese ADIZ?

An Air Defence Identification Zone is like a WARNING ZONE, not a no-fly-zone or an extension of Chinese airspace. An ADIZ is still international airspace.

Around 20 countries have their own ADIZ but not every ADIZ has the same rules.

An ADIZ acts as a THREAT ASSESSMENT to the Chinese mainland.

If an aircraft enters the ADIZ and identifies itself, then China knows what it's doing and that it poses no direct threat to the Chinese mainland.

If an aircraft enters the ADIZ and don't identify itself, then there are few scenarios that determines whether China should deploy its fighters to intercept the aircraft.

If an aircraft don't identify itself but merely skirt around the outer edge of the ADIZ like what the B-52 bombers did, China has no reason to deploy its fighters as those B-52 bombers poses no direct threat to the Chinese mainland.

But, if the B-52 bombers don't identify itself AND keeps COMING TOWARDS the Chinese mainland, then China will do a threat assessment of the aircraft and deploy its fighters to intercept the B-52 bombers.

Understand that China will only deploy its fighters based on the threat an aircraft poses to the Chinese mainland. If the aircraft identifies itself, China knows what the aircraft is doing and that it poses no direct threat. It is only when an aircraft don't identify itself AND keeps coming towards the Chinese mainland, then China has to assess the level of threat the aircraft poses to the Chinese mainland, if the threat is determined to be high, then China will deploy its fighters to intercept the unidentified aircraft as it poses a direct threat to the Chinese mainland.

This is essentially what the Chinese ADIZ is all about.
 
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These idiotic indian even don't know what's ADIZ, no need waste time discuss with them, let they happy neurotically.

No ADIZ, USAF and USAN and JP will be there, China also will monitor them, make action, Now we setup a ADIZ, no too much change, Japanese ADIZ has been builded since 1969, china alway fly into it without telling Japan before it, have any report that china airplane be shot down? if you the enemy plane was far from you, not fly into you terrioty(ADIZ not mean territory, to indian idiot), you can judge their intention, whether deploy plane to intercept it, depend on your judgement.

Sorry, I again waste time here on teaching these idiotic indian, polluted by ganges river water!
 
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