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China tells US to halt spy plane flights
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 27, 2011

China has demanded that the United States stop spy plane flights near the Chinese coast, saying they have "severely harmed" trust, but the Pentagon insisted Wednesday it was within its rights.

The dispute comes after Taiwanese media reported two Chinese fighter jets attempted to scare off an American U2 reconnaissance plane that was collecting intelligence on China while flying along the Taiwan Strait in late June.

Beijing's defence ministry said the US must end such flights, calling them a "major obstacle" as the two Pacific powers try to put a series of military disputes behind them, China's state-run Global Times reported.

The flights "severely harmed" mutual trust, the paper quoted the ministry as saying.

"We demand that the US respects China's sovereignty and security interests, and take concrete measures to boost a healthy and stable development of military relations," it added. The defence ministry declined comment to AFP.

In Washington, Pentagon spokesman Colonel Dave Lapan would not give details about the recent episode but said that no US spy plane crossed into Chinese airspace.

"I can say that we fly reconnaissance missions in international airspace routinely and it is not unusual that (China) scrambles fighters," Lapan told reporters.

Lapan said that the issue showed the need for further military dialogue with China -- a priority for Admiral Mike Mullen, who earlier this month became the first chief of the US military to visit China since 2007.

"Part of the reason that we have a desire for a more robust (military) relationship and communication with the Chinese is to prevent things from developing into a crisis," Lapan said.

"There are going to be areas where we don't agree. It's our view that this is a freedom of navigation issue, that we operate in international waters and international airspace," he said.

Sino-US military relations have been plagued in recent years by periodic tensions stemming from US plans for arms sales to Taiwan and naval standoffs in the disputed South China Sea.

Beijing considers Taiwan part of its territory and refuses to abandon the possibility of taking the self-ruled island by force. The two sides split at the end of a civil war.

The United States recognises Beijing and not Taipei, but provides military support to Taiwan.

In the June encounter, one of the Chinese Sukhoi SU-27 fighters crossed over the Taiwan Strait's middle line, widely considered to be the boundary between Taiwan's airspace and that of the Chinese mainland, Taiwanese media have reported.

One of the Chinese jets did not leave until two Taiwanese planes were sent to intercept it, the island's United Daily News reported.

In April 2001, a US surveillance aircraft and a Chinese fighter jet collided in mid-air, killing a Chinese pilot and forcing the 24-member US crew to make an emergency landing on China's Hainan island. The Americans were freed after 11 days in an early crisis for newly elected president George W. Bush.

Mullen, writing in The New York Times on Tuesday, said that he spoke in Beijing with his Chinese counterpart General Chen Bingde about having "more frequent discussions, more exercises, more personnel exchanges."

"A good bit of misunderstanding between our militaries can be cleared up by reaching out to each other. We don't have to give away secrets to make our intentions clear, just open up a little," wrote the outgoing chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.




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Taiwan says determined to buy US fighters
Taipei (AFP) July 27, 2011 - Taiwan said Wednesday it was determined to acquire F-16s from the United States, rejecting allegations that the island had toned down its campaign for approval to buy the jet fighters.

Taiwan in 2007 applied to the United States to buy 66 F-16 aircraft, saying they were needed to counter a rising China, but observers say Washington has held up the deal for fear of angering Beijing.

"The defence ministry has constantly appealed to the US to sell the F-16 C/D jets through various channels. Our determination to maintain self-defence has never changed," it said in a statement.

The comments came after a Washington Times report quoted an unnamed US defence official as saying that Taiwan "has not lobbied very strongly" for the military hardware.

The official was also cited as saying that a recent incident of Chinese jets entering Taiwan's airspace while chasing a US surveillance plane highlighted the "failures" of Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeous Beijing-friendly policies.

Taiwan's defence authorities Monday confirmed reports that in late June, two Chinese SU-27 fighter planes flew across the mid-line of the Taiwan Strait, widely considered the boundary between its airspace and that of the mainland.> But it downplayed the act as a "routine training mission."

Taiwan's United Daily News reported that the Chinese jets were attempting to drive away a US U2 reconnaissance aircraft flying along the Taiwan Strait to collect information on the Chinese mainland.

Beijing has demanded that Washington stop spy plane flights near the Chinese coast, saying they have "severely harmed" trust between the two countries, state-run media reported Wednesday.

The United States gives diplomatic recognition to Beijing rather than Taipei but remains a leading arms supplier to the island.

China reacted furiously in January 2010 when the Obama administration announced a $6.4 billion arms deal with the self-governing island.

That package included Patriot missiles, Black Hawk helicopters and equipment for Taiwan's existing F-16 fleet, but no submarines or new fighter jets.

Beijing considers Taiwan part of its territory and refuses to abandon the possibility of taking Taiwan by force, even though the island has ruled itself since their split in 1949 after a civil war.





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TAIWAN NEWS
Taiwan general who spied for China gets life
Taipei (AFP) July 25, 2011
A Taiwanese general lured by a honey trap into spying for China was sentenced to life in prison by a military high court on Monday, in one of the island's worst espionage cases for half a century. Major general Lo Hsien-che, former chief of the army telecommunications and electronic information department, was indicted in May for spying and taking bribes from China beginning in 2004. He ... read more


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