China's Liaoning carrier flotilla heads home after radar incident

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.

China's Liaoning aircraft carrier flotilla, part of the People's Liberation Army (PLA), was observed entering the East China Sea on Friday by Japan's Defense Ministry's Joint Staff Office, following military exercises in the Pacific. This development comes exactly one week after a tense encounter that heightened concerns over regional security.

On December 6, aircraft from the Liaoning were linked to what Tokyo described as a "dangerous" incident. Chinese military jets reportedly locked their radar onto Air Self-Defense Force (ASDF) fighters that had scrambled to monitor the flotilla as it passed between Okinawa's main island and Miyako Island. Japanese officials criticized the action sharply, viewing it as provocative.

Earlier in the week, a replenishment vessel had joined the carrier group, leading defense officials to speculate that it might remain in the area for up to a month. However, the latest sightings suggest a shift, with the flotilla now heading homeward. Such incidents underscore the fragile state of China-Japan defense relations, often strained by encounters in shared maritime and aerial spaces.

The event highlights broader issues of China's expanding naval presence and Japan's efforts to safeguard its waters, prompting calls for renewed diplomatic engagement between the two nations.

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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 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.

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Earlier this month, Japanese fighter jets flew close to a People's Liberation Army aircraft carrier group during military exercises near Japan, sparking mutual accusations of provocation. Beijing claimed the Japanese aircraft disrupted the drills, while Tokyo accused China of instigating the incident. The episode has once again spotlighted China's mainstay carrier-based fighter, the J-15, in service for over a decade and often patrolling hotspots like the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait.

Satellite imagery indicates China is likely constructing its first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier at a dockyard in Dalian, aimed at countering US forces in a potential Taiwan conflict, according to analysis by the Japan Institute for National Fundamentals.

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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.

Two new Type 055 destroyers assigned to the PLA East China Fleet, Dongguan and Anqing, have undergone their first live-fire drills. The exercises aim to rapidly integrate the advanced vessels into the Eastern Theatre Command's joint combat system covering Taiwan and seas near Japan.

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The People's Liberation Army Eastern Theater Command wrapped up its two-day 'Justice Mission 2025' live-fire exercise on Dec. 30, encircling swathes of Taiwan in its largest drill to date. Building on the second day's operations reported previously, the exercise followed the US approval of a record $11.1 billion weapons package for Taiwan and featured army, navy, air force, and rocket force units with stealth fighters, destroyers, and missile systems like the PHL-16. Taiwan detected 31 warships, 16 coastguard vessels overall, and 207 PLA aircraft sorties, 125 crossing the Taiwan Strait median line.

 

 

 

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