China's Defense Ministry stated Sunday that its handling of Japanese Self-Defense Force aircraft repeatedly entering the East China Sea Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) was "completely legitimate and professional."
Chinese Position:
Defense Spokesperson Zhang Bing told Xinhua that China "lawfully dispatched fighter jets to track and monitor Japanese reconnaissance aircraft"
Accused Japan of "close-range surveillance and harassment operations that endanger bilateral maritime/air security"
Insisted all Chinese actions were "lawful and standard procedure"
Japanese Counterclaims:
Japan's Foreign Ministry filed an "urgent protest" through Vice Minister Funakoshi, citing:
A Chinese JH-7 fighter came within 30 meters of a Japanese YS-11EB surveillance plane last week
Another JH-7 approached within 60 meters for 10 minutes
In June, a J-15 from China's Shandong carrier closed to 45 meters of a Japanese P-3C patrol aircraft
Technical Details of Incidents:
Date | Chinese Aircraft | Japanese Aircraft | Minimum Distance | Duration |
---|---|---|---|---|
Last Week | JH-7 | YS-11EB | 30m | 15 min |
Last Week | JH-7 | YS-11EB | 60m | 10 min |
June 7-8 | J-15 | P-3C | 45m | - |
Regional Context:
These are the fourth and fifth such incidents reported in 2024
ADIZ overlaps disputed waters near Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands (controlled by Japan, claimed by China)
Comes weeks after China-Japan maritime talks failed to ease tensions