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China’s Giant Spy Drone Stalks Foreign Warships

cirr

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courtesy Alert 5


DAVID AXE

Americans are so base that they don't seem to have any sense of shame。Despicable villain these people are!:sick::lol:

FLIRTING WITH WAR


05.20.16 5:00 AM ET

China’s Giant Spy Drone Stalks Foreign Warships

The simmering South China Sea dispute is getting closer to boiling over—with Beijing’s fighter jets buzzing U.S. spy planes and now sightings of a high-tech new surveillance drone.

China has dramatically escalated its military expansion into the disputed waters and airspace of the South China Sea.

Deploying ships, jet fighters, and, reportedly, a high-tech surveillance drone, Beijing is moving quickly to cement its claims on strategic islands, while also forcefully rebuffing America’s own military moves in the region.

The Chinese escalation began in dramatic fashion on May 10, when the Chinese air force scrambled J-11 fighter jets to tail the U.S. Navy destroyer USS William P. Lawrence as the 500-foot-long warship sailed in international waters 12 miles from a new military installation Beijing has built on Fiery Cross Reef in the South China Sea between Vietnam and the Philippines.

A rapid-fire series of confrontations followed. Chinese jets harassed U.S. planes, sparking alarm inside the Pentagon. And the Chinese air force reportedly deployed its latest spy drone to peer down at foreign ships, presumably including American vessels.

Northro Gruman Sea Systems/courtesy U.S. Navy
The U.S. Navy sent the destroyer USS <i>Chung-Hoon</i> to challenge Chinese territorial claims.

Chinese troops occupy Fiery Cross Reef, but the Philippines, Vietnam, and Taiwan also claim the island. At stake in the China Sea disputes are control over oil and natural gas fields, and fisheries worth many billions of dollars.

The Pentagon had sent William P. Lawrence and her approximately 300 sailors to Fiery Cross Reef as part of a so-called freedom-of-navigation operation—in other words, as a reminder to Beijing that Washington does not recognize its claims on Fiery Cross Reef and other islands.

In 2014 and 2015, the Chinese government dredged around several disputed islands in the East and South China Sea, piling sand on top of delicate coral reefs in order to expand the islands and make space for ports, runways, and military installations.

The outpost construction is part of a deliberate strategy on Beijing’s part to gradually legitimize its own contested territorial claims. “China often uses a progression of small, incremental steps to increase its effective control over disputed areas,” the Pentagon explained in the latest edition of its annual report on the Chinese military.

Normally, Beijing tries to time and tailor its moves just right to “avoid escalation to military conflict,” the Pentagon’s China report noted. Rather than deploying heavily armed warships to patrol disputed waters, China usually sends lightly armed coast guard vessels—or even allegedly sponsors fishermen to sail their civilian vessels into confrontations with foreign ships.

Now Beijing’s approach seems to have changed. Either the Chinese government has miscalculated the scale and speed of its military response to the passage of U.S. ships and planes or it has switched up its strategy—because in recent months, the United States and China have definitely flirted with overt military conflict.

“In my opinion, China is clearly militarizing the South China Sea,” Adm. Harry Harris, head of U.S. Pacific Command, told Congress in February. “You’d have to believe in a flat Earth to believe otherwise.”

Amid China’s island-dredging boom, Washington organized several freedom-of-navigation operations, sending warships and warplanes to sail and fly around the new island bases.

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Staff Sgt. D. Myles Cullen/Dept. of Defense
Chinese fighters such as this Su-27 have repeatedly threatened American surveillance aircraft.


In March, the American aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis plus the cruisers Antietam and Mobile Bay and the destroyers Chung-Hoon and Stockdale sailed through the South China Sea, prompting Beijing to rescind an invitation for the carrier and her escorts to visit Hong Kong. William P. Lawrence’s jaunt around Fiery Cross Reef came just a few weeks later.

“This operation demonstrates, as President Obama has stated, that the United States will fly, sail, and operate wherever international law allows,” Cmdr. Bill Urban, a Pentagon spokesman, told The Washington Post. “That is [as] true in the South China Sea as in other places around the globe.”

Beijing defended its response to the destroyer’s appearance. “The American naval vessel threatened China’s sovereignty, security, and interests,” said Lu Kang, a spokesman for China’s foreign ministry. “We will take necessary measures to safeguard China’s sovereignty and territory.”

Those measures were more forceful than U.S. officials perhaps expected. On May 17, two Chinese J-11 jet fighters took off from Hainan Island, in southern China, and flew within 50 feet of a U.S. Navy EP-3E surveillance plane cruising in international airspace near the island. The J-11s edged so close to the EP-3 that the American crew had to dive to avoid a collision.

The crew surely recalled a similar incident that occurred in the same area in 2001, when a Chinese fighter actually collided with an EP-3. The Chinese pilot died. The American crew managed to land their damaged plane on Hainan. Chinese authorities detained the U.S. aviators for more than a week—and held on to their aircraft for more than three months.

The Pentagon condemned the May 17 interception as “unsafe.”

Japan Coast Guard
The Chinese coast guard is on the front line of Beijing's expansion into the Pacific.


Beijing rejected that characterization. “Information from the relevant Chinese authorities shows that what the U.S. said is not true,” Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Hong Lei shot back. “The U.S. Navy plane EP-3 was then conducting reconnaissance close to China’s Hainan [island]. In accordance with laws and regulations, the two Chinese military aircraft followed and monitored the U.S. plane from a safe distance without taking any dangerous actions. Their operation was completely in keeping with safety and professional standards.”

U.S. military planners were surely on edge even before China’s jets harassed the American plane. There have been several, similar close-encounters between U.S. and Russian ships and planes in recent weeks. In April, Russian bombers buzzed an American destroyer sailing in the Baltic Sea.

The same month, a Russian fighter jet flew a barrel roll over over a U.S. Air Force RC-135 spy plane flying in the same region.

With tensions running high, Beijing has made perhaps its most surprising move yet—sending into the disputed zone one of its most sophisticated surveillance drones. According to Alert 5, a highly reputable network of aviation bloggers, the Chinese air force’s brand-new Air Sniper drone, which is roughly equivalent to the U.S. Air Force’s own Reaper drone, “has been monitoring foreign warships in the South China Sea” since mid-May.

This is apparently the Air Sniper’s first frontline mission—and, of course, its first snooping on U.S. forces.

“China demonstrated a willingness to tolerate higher levels of tension in the pursuit of its interests, especially in pursuit of its territorial claims in the East and South China Sea,” the Pentagon’s recent China report stated. “However, China still seeks to avoid direct and explicit conflict with the United States.”

That could be changing. “The Chinese people do not want to have war, so we will be opposed to [the] U.S. if it stirs up any conflict,” Liu Zhenmin, vice minister of China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said on May 19. “Of course, if the Korean War or Vietnam War are replayed, then we will have to defend ourselves.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...-giant-spy-drone-stalks-foreign-warships.html
 
That's considered giant???

You do realize how large some of the US UAV's that patrol the South China Sea daily for over a decade are..


pgL_GH-10021_046.jpg
Woo, this is super giant UAV, we are developing this kind of monster, hope you USA deploy it around China, we need your "help", you should know what is my meaning, :-)
 
Woo, this is super giant UAV, we are developing this kind of monster, hope you USA deploy it around China, we need your "help", you should know what is my meaning, :-)

It's been deployed around China for like 10-15 years.

Japan and Korea even want their own:
http://www.defensetech.org/2016/03/24/japan-south-korea-going-for-global-hawk-drones-official-says/
"The U.S. already deploys RQ-4 Global Hawks made by Northrop Grumman Corp. from Japan through a cooperative arrangement, launching the large surveillance drones from a Japanese base to beam back video feeds across the region from strategically vital regions — such as the South China Sea."
 
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“In my opinion, China is clearly militarizing the South China Sea,” Adm. Harry Harris, head of U.S. Pacific Command, told Congress in February. “You’d have to believe in a flat Earth to believe otherwise.”

That's a bloody lie.

China's island development is no different from the development of Hawaii. Entirely peaceful.
 
That's a bloody lie.

China's island development is no different from the development of Hawaii. Entirely peaceful.

Yes, everybody expects the islands to be turned into a resort paradise like the one's in Hawaii...


You'll be seeing this built any day now. Let us know when they open..we are waiting!


closeup-of-ncl-pride-of-aloha-cruise-ship-and-painted-lei-docked-at-bmhjj1.jpg

Let us know when the cruise ships dock
 
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It's been deployed around China for like 10-15 years.

Sure. It was deployed around China 5 years before it was first deployed anywhere, because it could take off before it was deployed.

WoW U.S.A. U.S.A. ! So powerfull! Wow! Why China even try! Wow! So waeak! Wow! Come stop China you are 50 years behind us lol! WoW please stop, you are 30 years behind us, lol you destroyer are so small lol! WoW please stop, 10-15 years behind us, your drones are so small lol! You will never be any good! China stop it! Please!
 
Sure. It was deployed around China 5 years before it was first deployed anywhere, because it could take off before it was deployed.

WoW U.S.A. U.S.A. ! So powerfull! Wow! Why China even try! Wow! So waeak! Wow! Come stop China you are 50 years behind us lol! WoW please stop, you are 30 years behind us, lol you destroyer are so small lol! WoW please stop, 10-15 years behind us, your drones are so small lol! You will never be any good! China stop it! Please!


China and it's inflated ego :pop: looks like we got a new sheriff in town
 
how bout this?
wingspan estimated at 40 to 50 m :D
UpAD7kq.jpg

B4gmwt1.jpg

No way that wingspan is 40-50 meters. You can see the drone did not even take up half of a standard runway.

A Boeing 737 can take 80% of a standard runway and it's biggest wingspan is only 32 meters (Roughly the same span as a global hawk). Even the Jumbo Jet Boeing-747-400 do only have 59-67 meters wingspan, are you saying this drone is as big as a Boeing 747??

Sure. It was deployed around China 5 years before it was first deployed anywhere, because it could take off before it was deployed.

WoW U.S.A. U.S.A. ! So powerfull! Wow! Why China even try! Wow! So waeak! Wow! Come stop China you are 50 years behind us lol! WoW please stop, you are 30 years behind us, lol you destroyer are so small lol! WoW please stop, 10-15 years behind us, your drones are so small lol! You will never be any good! China stop it! Please!

Honestly, I do not understand a single word you say here........Or is it only me??

Dude, you need to take a chill pill..........

gato (107).JPG

Look at some kitten, it will calm you down
 
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Honestly, I do not understand a single word you say here........Or is it only me??
Dude, you need to take a chill pill.........
Sorry I can't dumb down the obvious even more for you without explaining every word to you like to a children. I pretty sure you understood it anyways, but all I get from every high and mighty Americans seem to be personal attacks and dodging the point.

And oh the irony of the 24/7 sore "China cant have nice things" police urging someone else to take the "chill pill".
 
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