Ministry: China 'effectively' monitoring ADIZ
Updated: 2013-12-14 09:38
(China Daily)
|
||||||||
A Foreign Ministry spokesman said on Friday that China has the full capacity to effectively monitor its Air Defense Identification Zone after South Korea and Japan held a joint search-and-rescue exercise in the East China Sea the day before.
The exercise was carried out in an area where the China and Japan air defense identification zones overlap, and involved two warships and a helicopter from Japan and military equipment from South Korea. The Japanese military did not inform China about its use of a helicopter.
"China is monitoring the ADIZ effectively right now," Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said at a daily news briefing, reiterating China's firm determination to secure its territory and territorial airspace.
Committed to maintain the peace, order and stability of the region and relevant airspace, China hopes all parties can make similar efforts, rather than the opposite, the spokesman said.
In anther development, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and US Vice-President Joe Biden reaffirmed in a teleconference on Thursday that the two countries will strengthen their cooperation in addressing China's ADIZ.
The issue dominated a trip to Japan, China and South Korea that Biden made earlier this month.
Over the phone, Biden reiterated US support for steps to reduce regional tension, such as new bilateral mechanisms for crisis communication.
"The vice-president also reinforced the importance of trilateral security cooperation among the US, Japan and the Republic of Korea, and noted our continued support for improved relations between Tokyo and Seoul," a statement from Biden's office said.
China Daily-Agencies
- Moon rover, lander photograph each other
- With a hole in its heart, South Africa buries Mandela
- After the storm
- Guangzhou beats Al-Ahly 2-0 at Club World Cup
- Two students wounded in US school shooting
- 21 died in Xinjiang coal mine explosion
- Mandela's body transferred to Qunu village
- Postgraduates get hard lessons at job fair
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Logging out of an Internet addiction |
Prepare prisoners for life after release |
'Can we survive after surviving?' |
Cities hit hard by smog |
$50,000 in the US; $149,000 in China |
Against a sea of troubles |
Today's Top News
Chinese law firm expands in US
Complacency hinders US energy-saving strategies
Dialogue urged after naval incident
Chang'e-3 mission 'complete success'
Cave art's wide influence explored
DPRK leader's aunt unscathed after purge
Funding, market key to urbanization
Vaccines suspended after deaths
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |