Off the wire
4th LD Writethru: Death toll of suicide attack in Afghan eastern Ghazni soars to 9, with 13 injured  • 1st LD-Writethru: SoftBank to sell 4-pct stake in Alibaba  • Soccer lights up life of left-behind children in southwest China  • S.Korean prosecutors seize hundreds of Volkswagen, Audi vehicles  • 4G networks must cover at least 95 pct of outdoor areas in Singapore starting July  • Israel releases Jewish extremist arson attacker from jail  • Roundup: Abe to announce further delay to tax hike as efficacy of "Abenomics" in focus  • Australian state to implement horse-riding code of practice following accidents  • 1st LD Writethru: District police chief killed in N. Afghanistan  • Chinese shares close mixed Wednesday  
You are here:   Home

Chinese embassy rejects U.S. paper's account of military air encounter over S. China Sea

Xinhua, June 1, 2016 Adjust font size:

The Chinese Embassy in Washington on Tuesday rejected the New York Times' account about a recent air encounter between Chinese and U.S. military planes over the South China Sea.

The Chinese military aircraft acted professionally while it watched the U.S. Navy spy plane carrying out close reconnaissance in Chinese coastal waters, said Zhu Haiquan, a spokesman for the Chinese embassy, in a letter to the Times published on the paper's website Tuesday.

"Our operation was completely compliant with safety and professional standards. The attempt at intimidation by American military aircraft in the South China Sea, however, was not," Zhu pointed out.

The encounter occurred about two weeks ago over China's Hainan Island. The Chinese Defense Ministry in Beijing has accused the American plane of espionage, saying the Chinese aircraft responded properly in line with professional standards and a bilateral agreement.

"Regarding the incident raised in the editorial, our information indicates that Chinese military aircraft followed from a safe distance and monitored the American plane carrying out close reconnaissance in Chinese coastal waters," Zhu wrote in the letter, responding to the May 21 Times editorial entitled "Playing Chicken in the South China Sea."

The editorial alleged that "China has been behaving in a bellicose fashion" in its effort to uphold sovereignty.

Zhu stressed that "China is exercising its legitimate rights by upholding the sovereignty of our islands in the South China Sea," which was restored after World War II, in accordance with the Cairo Declaration and the Potsdam Proclamation.

"The South China Sea should not be turned into a geopolitical chessboard. We hope the United States, instead of flexing muscles, could play a responsible and constructive role in promoting dialogue and negotiation," Zhu wrote. Endi