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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