China and USA are in a big cold from many years, but it seems it will bulged out in the future years as, China is growing leader of World Financials.
Defying orders from Beijing, a pair of B-52 bombers fly over the Senkaku Islands without informing China on Monday.The islands have been a source of tension between China and Japan for decades
A Pentagon spokesman said the planes had followed "normal procedures".
The islands, known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, are a source of rising tension between the two nations.
Japan has dismissed the Chinese defence zone as "not valid at all" and two of its biggest airlines announced on Tuesday they would abide by a request from the government in Tokyo not to implement the new rules.
'Normal procedures' "We have conducted operations in the area of the Senkakus," said US Colonel Steve Warren.
"We have continued to follow our normal procedures, which include not filing flight plans, not radioing ahead and not registering our frequencies."
He added that so far there had been no response from China.
The aircraft, which were unarmed, had taken off from Guam on Monday and the flight was part of a regular exercise in the area, a US defence official said.
The US - which has more than 70,000 troops in Japan and South Korea - had previously said it would not abide by the "destabilising" Chinese-imposed zone.
Defying orders from Beijing, a pair of B-52 bombers fly over the Senkaku Islands without informing China on Monday.The islands have been a source of tension between China and Japan for decades
The
US has flown two B-52 bombers over disputed islands in the East China
Sea in defiance of new Chinese air defence rules, officials say.
China set up its "air defence identification zone" on
Saturday insisting that aircraft obey its rules or face "emergency
defensive measures".A Pentagon spokesman said the planes had followed "normal procedures".
The islands, known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, are a source of rising tension between the two nations.
Japan has dismissed the Chinese defence zone as "not valid at all" and two of its biggest airlines announced on Tuesday they would abide by a request from the government in Tokyo not to implement the new rules.
'Normal procedures' "We have conducted operations in the area of the Senkakus," said US Colonel Steve Warren.
"We have continued to follow our normal procedures, which include not filing flight plans, not radioing ahead and not registering our frequencies."
He added that so far there had been no response from China.
The aircraft, which were unarmed, had taken off from Guam on Monday and the flight was part of a regular exercise in the area, a US defence official said.
The US - which has more than 70,000 troops in Japan and South Korea - had previously said it would not abide by the "destabilising" Chinese-imposed zone.
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