Yet
little notice is taken of another Communist state despatching its warplanes in
similar fashion – and risking conflict by default.
Several Japanese
islands in the East China Sea are in dispute with China. And the Japanese air
base at Naha, scramble on average more than once a day – and achieved a dubious
record of more than 400 times last year.
Wikipedia commons
When
Major General Yasuhiko Suzuki was first posted as a fighter pilot to
subtropical Naha in the 1990s it was a military backwater. Now the commanding
officer, he says China’s assertiveness has made it Japan’s most important base.
Japan’s
defences, particularly in the southwest islands, are being increased; they’re
set to establish a new military observation unit on Yonaguni island, close to
the contested islets.
Japan and
China each claim ownership of the uninhabited islets - known as Senkaku in
Japan and Diaoyu in China - that are administered by Japan. This dispute has apparently
affected Japanese investment in China. China says it has records of the islands
going back about 600 years and that it administered them until it lost a war to
Japan in 1895.
Japan
sent aircraft to head off foreign military planes flying close to its airspace in
excess of 740, heading for the highest annual total since the end of the Cold
War. While dispatches against Russian aircraft are back down after an increase
last year, sorties against Chinese aircraft, have continued to rise.
China is
probably seeking to glean data through its fly-bys, a similar technique
employed by the Russians in the West.
Right
now, the world is a dangerous place.
***
Read about the old Cold War in two explosive e-books featuring psychic spy Tana Standish, published by Crooked Cat Publishing.
THE PRAGUE PAPERS - Czechoslovakia, 1975
THE TEHRAN TEXT - Iran, 1978
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