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A Russian spy plane violated Japan’s airspace 3 times, driving it to scramble its fighters and fire flares

The Russian IL-35’s flight path included three separate incursions in the airspace.

The incursion comes on the heels of a Chinese military Y-9 spy plane violating Japanese airspace near the Danjo Islands, located to the southeast of Nagasaki, late last month. The Chinese military Y-9 was in Japanese airspace for three minutes, Japan’s defense ministry reported.

At the time, Japanese Air Self-Defense Force fighters were scrambled but didn’t fire off flares.

There were actually multiple incidents involving Chinese military assets. Beijing insisted they were not linked.

China regularly operates military aircraft in international airspace in accordance with international law. It also flies into contested airspace, often to assert its position. But the incident last month was the first known time one of Beijing’s military planes had directly violated Japanese airspace.

Days later, a Chinese navy vessel violated Japan’s territorial waters west of Kuchinoerabu Island, which is located in the Tokara Strait southwest of the country’s four biggest islands.

The Chinese Schuppan-class survey ship remained in the area before sailing southwest of Yakushima Island.

China asserted neither of the incidents were linked, with Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning arguing that the passage of the Tokara Strait was “fully lawful and legitimate.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

https://www.businessinsider.com/japans-fighters-fired-flares-after-russian-plane-violated-airspace-2024-9