Flyet er innenfor ADIZ, en sone hvor fly skal identifisere seg før de entrer. Det er imidlertid en sone som ikke er internasjonalt anerkjent. En kan altså opptre der som en gjør i internasjonalt luftrom. (Red.)
Chinese Reconnaissance Drone Detected off East Coast of Taiwan
In addition to intruding on Taiwan’s air defense
identification zone (ADIZ) with manned military aircraft on Monday (July 25),
China also dispatched a drone off the east coast of Taiwan, according to
Japan’s Ministry of Defense.
According to press release issued by the Japan’s Ministry of Defense
Joint Staff on Monday, a Chinese TB-001 reconnaissance and strike unmanned
aerial vehicle (UAV), dubbed the “Twin-Tailed Scorpion,” flew from the East
China Sea area through the Miyako Strait between the islands of Okinawa and
Miyakojima. After entering the Pacific Ocean, the UAV turned southwest, west,
and again southwest as it flew past the Sakishima Islands.
It then headed northwest toward the Bashi Channel
and northeastern Taiwan. The last reported heading of the UAV by Japan’s
defense ministry showed it flying southwest off the coast of Taiwan’s Hualien
County, deep inside the eastern sector of Taiwan’s ADIZ.
Route Chinese UAV took
Japan’s Air Self-Defense Force scrambled fighter
jets in response to the drone’s flight through the Miyako Strait, but the UAV
did not enter Japan’s airspace. NHK cited defense ministry sources as saying
that China may have sent the drone to gather intelligence on Taiwan’s annual
military exercises that commenced that day, and they added that it also may
have been an attempt by Chinese leadership to “give a warning to Taiwan.”
Taiwan’s Ministry of Defense (MND) has yet to
issue an official statement on the Chinese drone’s flight. On Monday, it
did announce that one People’s Liberation Army Air Force
(PLAAF) Shenyang J-11 fighter jet and one Shaanxi Y-8 reconnaissance plane had
entered the southwest corner of Taiwan’s ADIZ, that day.
The PLAAF intrusions occurred on the first day of
both Taiwan’s annual Han Kuang military exercise (漢光演習), a series
of war games that include live-fire maneuvers being held from July 25-29, and
the Wan An exercise (萬安演習), an air
raid drill simulating a Chinese air attack taking place from July 25-28.
On Tuesday (July 26), Taiwan’s military is slated
to conduct live-fire exercises and a joint Air Force and Navy drill consisting
of more than 20 naval vessels and several Air Force fighters off eastern Yilan
County’s Suao naval base. The purpose of the exercise is to test Taiwan’s joint
defense capabilities against a Chinese invasion by sea, according to the MND.
Photos: Facebook, Ministry of Defense Joint Staff Japan image
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