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China 'regrets' S. Korea air zone expansion; Japan says no problem
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 09, 2013


Graphic map showing South Korea's expanded air defence ID zone. (AFP)

Japan gives OK to S. Korea's expanded air defence zone
Tokyo (AFP) Dec 09, 2013 - Tokyo on Monday cautiously endorsed South Korea's expanded air defence zone, saying it had blasted a similar move by China because it covered Japanese territory.

Regional tensions have been on high alert since Beijing declared an Air Defence Identification Zone (ADIZ) in the East China Sea last month, in which foreign planes are supposed to file flight plans with China.

The US, Japan and South Korea accused China of unilaterally changing the status quo and flew military and paramilitary aircraft into the area in shows of defiance.

On Sunday, South Korea announced an expanded air defence zone, which covers a submerged rock disputed by Beijing and Seoul, and said it would go into effect on December 15.

Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga on Monday said Seoul had informed Tokyo in advance about its plans -- something Beijing had not done.

"We don't think it's going to be a problem at the moment," Suga, the government's top spokesman, told reporters in Tokyo.

"It is different from the one announced by China because it does not cover our country's territorial air, waters or land," he added.

Conservative Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera to set up a "thorough system of communication" between Tokyo and Seoul over the expanded zone, Jiji Press news agency reported.

Seoul expanded its ADIZ by about 66,480 square kilometres (25,670 square miles) -- or about two thirds of the size of the country -- in waters off its south coast, the defence ministry said.

The Chinese zone covers disputed Tokyo-controlled islands, known as the Senkaku islands in Japan and Diaoyu in China, that have been at the centre of a simmering territorial row.

China expressed "regret" Monday at South Korea's expansion of its air defence identification zone, weeks after Beijing provoked regional fury by establishing its own.

Seoul and Tokyo, along with Washington, which is in security alliances with them both, have all refused to accept Beijing's air defence identification zone (ADIZ).

The Chinese ADIZ overlaps with both Japan and South Korea's, which were set up decades ago, and includes areas claimed by both countries.

Beijing has lashed out at historic rival Tokyo, with which it is embroiled in a row over islands in the East China Sea that has escalated since last year.

But in contrast Beijing has sought to cultivate friendly relations with Seoul, even though the expanded South Korean ADIZ covers a contested submerged rock known as Ieodo in Korea and Suyan in China.

At a regular press briefing foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei expressed regret over Seoul's announcement Sunday that it was expanding its ADIZ by about 66,480 square kilometres (25,670 square miles) -- roughly two thirds the size of the country.

"China expresses regret over the ROK's decision to expand its ADIZ," he said, referring to the formal name Republic of Korea.

"China will stay in communication with the ROK based on equality and mutual respect. We hope that the ROK will meet China halfway," he continued.

"Suyan is a submerged reef. It is not a territory. China and ROK have consensus on that. The relevant issues can only be solved through negotiation of maritime demarcation," he said.

China's state-run media downplayed the issue, with the Chinese-language edition of the Global Times, which normally strikes a nationalist tone, saying in an editorial: "China will not make a big deal out of this right now."

South Korea's move to extend its air zone -- the first revision to its air defence area for 62 years -- was "opportunistic" in light of the more serious standoff between Beijing and Tokyo, it said, but added that "China respects Korea's interests".

"Korea is a friendly and important partner in China's development. Hopefully Korea will fully respond to China's goodwill, not go over the line," it said.

No editorials on the subject appeared in other major outlets, including the ruling Communist Party paper, the People's Daily, or the state news agency Xinhua, while reports on the news were mild.

"Although it objectively overlaps with China's ADIZ, it's an action South Korea took to ensure its interests and the demands of its people," the Global Times English-language news report quoted foreign affairs expert Su Hao as saying.

The move was not hostile, it cited Su as saying, though another expert was quoted as calling it provocative.

The China Daily, citing naval expert Yin Zhuo, said "Beijing and Seoul know that neither China's announcement nor South Korea's expansion is an offensive measure".

China established its ADIZ in late November, requiring all aircraft within it to obey its instructions or risk unspecified "defensive emergency measures".

The US, Japan and South Korea accused China of unilaterally changing the status quo and flew military and paramilitary aircraft into the area in shows of defiance.

Analysts have said Beijing established the ADIZ to further assert its claim to the islands known as Diaoyu in China and Senkaku in Japan, which controls them.

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