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US flies B-52 bombers in China's air defense zone
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 26, 2013


Ban calls for China-Japan talks on islands dispute
United Nations, United States (AFP) Nov 26, 2013 - UN leader Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday called on China and Japan to negotiate an end to mounting territorial tensions, a spokesman said.

While not being drawn on the China-Japan dispute over islands in the East China Sea, Ban said tensions should be handled "amicably through dialogue and negotiations."

"There are quite a number of territorial disputes in Northeast Asia and in the Asia Pacific region," the UN spokesman Martin Nesirky told reporters when asked about the islands standoff at a briefing.

"The secretary general expects those disputes should be resolved amicably through dialogue and negotiations and in full accordance with international laws."

"The parties concerned should approach those issues with goodwill and a constructive spirit," he added.

Japan and other governments have rejected China's move to declare an "Air Defence Identification Zone" in an area of the East China Sea that included islands at the centre of a longstanding battle between Japan, which occupies the islands, and China.

Two US B-52 bombers flew over a disputed area of the East China Sea without informing Beijing, US officials said Tuesday, challenging China's bid to create an expanded "air defense zone."

The unarmed aircraft took off from Guam on Monday and the flight was previously scheduled as part of a routine exercise in the area, the defense officials said.

"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," Warren said.

The two aircraft spent "less than an hour" in China's unilaterally-declared Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) and did not encounter Chinese planes, he said.

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

China announced the expanded air defense zone amid a mounting territorial dispute with Japan over an island chain in the East China Sea known as Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese.

The area also includes waters claimed by Taiwan and South Korea, which also have both expressed their displeasure at Beijing's move.

Under the rules declared by China, 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.

Japan, the United States and several other governments sharply criticized China's announced air defense zone.

Australia 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.

The territorial dispute over the islands has simmered for decades but in September 2012, Japan nationalized three of the islands, in what it portrayed as an attempt to avoid a more inflammatory step by a nationalist politician.

Beijing, however, accuses Tokyo of disturbing the status quo, and has sent ships and planes to the islands in a show of force.

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

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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SUPERPOWERS
China creates air defence zone over Japan-controlled islands
Beijing (AFP) Nov 23, 2013
Tokyo branded as "very dangerous" a move by Beijing Saturday to set up an "air defence identification zone" over an area that includes disputed islands controlled by Japan, but claimed by China. In a move that raised the temperature of a bitter territorial row between the two countries, China's defence ministry said that it was setting up the zone to "guard against potential air threats". ... read more


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