US-Japan Defense Chiefs Discuss Fighter Jet Radar Confrontation Following China-Russia Drills

US and Japanese defense chiefs held a phone call on Friday to address a recent confrontation between Chinese and Japanese fighter jets amid China-Russia military drills, reaffirming alliance coordination to maintain regional stability without escalation.

Building on last week's China-Russia joint drills—where Japanese jets were scrambled and targeted by radar beams—and a subsequent US B-52 bomber flight with Japanese fighters over the Sea of Japan, US and Japanese defense chiefs spoke by phone on Friday.

The call focused on the radar confrontation between Chinese and Japanese jets over the weekend, highlighting persistent East Asia tensions. Japan's defense ministry stated the discussion aligned positions to avoid further escalation, with Tokyo emphasizing it does not seek to heighten conflicts with China. The US reaffirmed support for Japan and commitment to regional stability.

Such incidents underscore frequent aerial encounters drawing global attention, often involving radar locks or technical standoffs with limited public details. The exchange reinforces deepening US-Japan defense ties in response to Chinese military assertiveness in the Asia-Pacific.

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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.

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.

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Amid US-Japan joint patrols responding to China-Russia activities, analysts say the Trump administration faces a dilemma in backing ally Japan while maintaining China trade ties. Tokyo hopes for high-level US talks, but resolution depends on direct Beijing-Tokyo engagement.

China's Defense Ministry on Saturday urged the international community to firmly oppose Japan's reckless moves toward neo-militarism, in response to recent comments by Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi.

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South Korean Defence Minister Ahn Gyu-back lodged a complaint immediately with the US Forces Korea commander after receiving a report of the standoff last week. The incident involved around 10 US F-16 fighters taking off from Osan Air Base and flying west over the Yellow Sea toward China's air defence identification zone, prompting Beijing to scramble its own jets in a brief face-off. South Korean media highlight this as underscoring Seoul's growing difficulty in balancing ties with security ally the US and top trading partner China.

Japan, the United States, and the Philippines held their first joint military drills near the Bashi Channel, the waterway between the Philippines and Taiwan, earlier this week. The naval and aerial exercises took place under the framework of the Multilateral Maritime Cooperative Activity (MMCA) from Feb. 20 through Thursday.

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China’s People’s Liberation Army has accused Japan of pushing towards space militarisation, warning it could trigger an arms race. Articles in the PLA Daily target Tokyo’s defence and intelligence plans. This occurs as Japan ramps up space activities in response to perceived threats from China and Russia.

 

 

 

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