Japan scrambled fighter jets after a Chinese plane was seen Thursday
near small islands in the East China Sea that are claimed by both
countries.
This is the first time
that the dispute over the islands -- which Japan calls Senkaku and China
refers to as Diaoyu -- has involved aircraft, introducing a new sphere
of risky encounters for the two Asian neighbors.
Chinese government ships
have repeatedly entered the waters around the remote, rocky islands
since the Japanese government announced in September it was buying
several of the islands from private owners.
Japanese Coast Guard
vessels have engaged in games of cat and mouse with the Chinese ships,
with both sides broadcasting messages to one another insisting they have
territorial sovereignty over the area.
Analysts say that by sending its own patrols into the area.
Japan scrambles fighter jets
Why is Japan feuding over islands?
On Thursday morning, a
Japanese Coast Guard patrol vessel spotted the Chinese government plane
in airspace around the islands, Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura
said. As a result, the Japanese
Self Defense Force sent eight F-15 jets and an early warning E2C plane
to the area, the government said, revising up the number of planes it
initially said it had deployed.
By the time the Japanese
jets arrived, there was no sign of the Chinese plane, which had not
shown up on military radar, the Japanese Self Defense Force said. China's State Oceanic
Administration said a B-3837 patrol plane had arrived in the islands'
airspace Thursday morning in order to carry out a joint air-sea patrol
with ships in the area. The patrol teams announced China's territorial
claim and told the Japanese ships to leave the area, it said.
Fujimura said that the
Chinese plane's entry into the area was "extremely regrettable" and that
Japan has lodged a protest with the Chinese government through
diplomatic channels.
The Japanese
government's acquisition of the islands in September also set off
several days of violent anti-Japanese protests across China and soured
economic ties between the two Asian nations.
The United States has
said it doesn't take sides in territorial disputes and urged the two
sides to resolve the situation peacefully. Nonetheless, U.S. officials
have admitted that the islands fall under the scope of a mutual defense
treaty between Washington and Tokyo.
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