US general: Air Force to keep flying over South China Sea

epa05200274 Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi gestures as he speaks to reporters during a press conference on the sidelines of the fourth session of the 12th National People's Congress (NPC) in Beijing, China, 08 March 2016. The NPC has over 3,000 delegates and is the world's largest parliament or legislative assembly though its function is largely as a formal seal of approval for the policies fixed by the leaders of the Chinese Communist Party.  EPA/HOW HWEE YOUNG

CANBERRA/ AP

The US Air Force will continue to fly daily missions over the South China Sea despite a buildup of Chinese surface-to-air missiles and fighter jets in the contested region, with both nations’ militaries in discussions to avoid any miscalculations, a top US general said on Tuesday.
Gen. Lori Robinson, the commander of the Pacific Air Forces, also urged other nations to exercise their freedom to fly and sail in international airspace and waters claimed by China in the South China Sea “or risk losing it throughout the region.”
“We’ve watched the increased military capability on those islands, whether it’s the fighters, whether it’s the missiles or the 10,000-foot runways. We will continue to do as we’ve always done, and that is fly and sail in international airspace in accordance to international rules and norms,” Robinson told reporters in Australia’s capital, Canberra, where she will address the Royal Australian Air Force’s biennial Air Power Conference next week.
Robinson declined to say how the United States would retaliate if a US plane was shot down by the Chinese.
Several governments have conflicting claims in the South China Sea, a major conduit for world trade. The US lays no claims to the waters, but says it has an interest in ensuring freedom of navigation and overflight and non-use of force and coercion to assert claims.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi took a hard line on Tuesday on the country’s claims to virtually all of the South China Sea, saying Beijing won’t permit other nations to infringe on what it considers its sovereign rights in the strategically vital area.
Speaking to reporters at an annual news conference in Beijing, Wang said that another nation’s claim to freedom of navigation in the region doesn’t give it the right to do whatever it wants — an apparent reference to the US, which has sent naval ships past reefs where China has engaged in island-building.
Robinson conceded there was “a possibility of a miscalculation” leading to conflict in the increasingly militarized region.

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