Liaoning carrier and bombers probe near Japan amid US-Japan exercises

China's Liaoning aircraft carrier and Chinese-Russian bombers approached Japan's Pacific coasts off Shikoku and the Kii Peninsula in December before turning back together, coinciding with US-Japan joint drills and potentially testing allied readiness, Defense Ministry sources told Jiji Press.

The maneuvers occurred while the US 7th Fleet's carrier George Washington conducted exercises with Japan's Maritime Self-Defense Force south of the Kanto region. The coordinated turn-back at nearly identical longitudes off eastern Japan underscores possible intent to gauge response times.

This follows earlier events in the same deployment, including a December 6 radar-locking incident near Miyako Island where Chinese aircraft targeted scrambled Japanese Air Self-Defense Force fighters, and observations of the flotilla entering the East China Sea around December 12.

Such activities reflect China's growing PLA naval and air presence, heightening tensions in China-Japan and US-China relations amid evolving Pacific security dynamics.

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Japanese jets scramble as Chinese carrier Liaoning conducts drills off Okinawa, with radar locks prompting protest.
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Japan scrambles jets as Chinese carrier drills prompt radar lock-on protest

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China's navy conducted training flights from its aircraft carrier Liaoning in the Pacific after passing waters off Okinawa, prompting Japan to scramble Self-Defense Force jets. Chinese fighters locked radar onto Japanese aircraft twice, leading to a strong protest from Tokyo. The incident occurs amid heightened tensions over Taiwan.

China's Liaoning aircraft carrier flotilla has been spotted entering the East China Sea after military exercises in the Pacific. The Defense Ministry's Joint Staff Office said Friday that this appears to signal a return home, one week after a dangerous radar-locking incident involving Japanese fighters.

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U.S. nuclear-capable bombers flew over the Sea of Japan with Japanese fighter jets on Wednesday, following Chinese and Russian military drills near Japan and South Korea. The joint exercise reaffirms both nations' resolve to prevent unilateral changes to the status quo by force. It underscores readiness amid rising regional tensions.

Taiwan's Defense Ministry reported that China's newest aircraft carrier, the Fujian, sailed through the Taiwan Strait on Tuesday. This marks the vessel's first transit of the sensitive waterway since entering service last month. The democratically governed island views frequent Chinese military activities nearby as part of an ongoing pressure campaign from Beijing, which claims Taiwan as its territory.

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During the 20th round of China-Russia strategic security consultations in Moscow, the two sides exchanged views on Japan and reached a high degree of consensus, vowing to uphold World War II victory outcomes and oppose any whitewashing of colonial aggression. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian urged Japan to retract erroneous remarks on Taiwan and take concrete actions to enable normal exchanges.

Continuing its 'Justice Mission 2025' exercises launched on December 29, the People's Liberation Army Eastern Theater Command held the second day of drills on December 30, featuring live-fire operations simulating maritime attacks and anti-air and anti-submarine missions north and south of Taiwan. The manoeuvres serve as a warning to 'independence forces' and external interference. Taiwan's defence ministry detected a record 130 PLA aircraft, 14 ships, and eight coastguard vessels near the island in the prior 24 hours.

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South Korea and Japan agreed on January 30 to resume joint naval search and rescue exercises after nine years during a meeting at Japan's Yokosuka base. The decision aims to strengthen defense cooperation between the two nations. The ministers discussed expanding collaboration in areas like artificial intelligence and space.

 

 

 

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