TOKYO/SEOUL (Reuters) -
Japanese and South Korean military aircraft flew through disputed air space
over the East China Sea without informing China, officials said on Thursday,
challenging a new Chinese air defense zone that has increased regional tensions
and sparked concerns of an unintended clash.
The move came after Tokyo's
close ally Washington defied China's demand that airplanes flying through its
unilaterally announced zone identify themselves to Chinese authorities, flying
two unarmed B-52 bombers over the islands on Tuesday without informing Beijing.
Tensions have ratcheted up
since Beijing's weekend announcement of the zone that includes the skies over
islands at the heart of a feud between Japan and China, and its demand that
planes flying in the area first notify Chinese authorities.
Japan and the United States
have sharply criticized the move, which some experts said was aimed not only at
chipping away at Tokyo's control of the islands, known as the Senkaku in Japan
and the Diaoyu in China, but also at challenging U.S. dominance in the region.
The United States does not take
a position on the sovereignty of the islands but recognizes Tokyo's
administrative control and has assured Japan that the U.S.-Japan security pact covers
them.
The developments are expected
to dominate U.S. Vice President Joe Biden's visit to Japan, China and South
Korea next week.
Also on Thursday, China
rejected South Korea's demand for the repeal of the zone, but appeared to
soften its demand that commercial aircraft tell its military authorities of any
plans to transit the area. Japan's two biggest airlines have already begun
defying that order.
"The East China Sea Air
Defence Identification zone is not aimed at normal international flights. We hope
that relevant countries' airlines can proactively cooperate, so there is more
order and safety for flights," China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang
told reporters.
Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary
Yoshihide Suga said naval ships and patrol planes have been operating in the
East China Sea and would continue to do so.
"They are carrying out
surveillance activity as before in the East China Sea, including the
zone," Suga told a news conference, adding there has been no particular
response from China. "We are not going to change this (activity) out of
consideration to China," he added.
BEIJING REJECTS SEOUL'S DEMAND
A South Korean official also
said a navy reconnaissance plane had flown over a submerged rock in the area
claimed by both Beijing and Seoul, and that the flights would continue.
The rock, called Ieodo in Korea
and Suyan Rock in China, is controlled by South Korea, which maintains a
maritime research station built on it.
Asked about the South Korean
flight, Chinese spokesman Qin only said that Beijing was aware of it.
South Korea's reaction to
Beijing's weekend declaration has been somewhat muted, reflecting its efforts
to forge closer ties with China and a chill in relations with Japan.
On Thursday, however, Seoul's
vice defence minister told a senior Chinese military official that the move to
impose the new rules created military tension in the region and called on
Beijing to rectify the zone
"The Chinese reaction was
that they will not be accepting the (South) Korean side's demand," Defence
Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok told reporters after talks between Vice Defence
Minister Baek Seung-joo and Wang Guanzhong, the deputy chief of general staff
of the Chinese People's Liberation Army.
Asked if China would heed
Japanese calls to revoke the air defence zone, China's Defence Ministry
spokesman Yang Yujun said Tokyo had implemented its own zone in 1969 and blamed
it for raising tensions with its double standards.
"Japan consistently blames
others and smears the name of other countries but never examines its own
conduct," Yang said in a statement posted on the ministry's website after
a press briefing that was closed to foreign reporters.
"If they want it revoked,
then we would ask that Japan first revoke its own air defence identification
zone and China will reconsider it after 44 years," Yang said.
Japan says it only requires
planes headed for its territorial air space to notify authorities, not those
merely transiting through its air defence identification zone.
In the ongoing war of words,
the policy panel of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's Liberal Democratic
Party approved a resolution on Thursday demanding China rescind the new air
defence zone, saying the unilateral move reflected "unreasonable expansionism".
But the resolution dropped a more inflammatory reference to "premodern and
imperialist expansionism" contained in an earlier draft.
Reuters
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