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Beijing has also tried to demonstrate its military superiority in the East China Sea in ways that appear calculated to unsettle its rivals. On November 27th, China carried out an aerial exercise in which two bomber groups flew within a few miles of Japanese airspace before proceeding hundreds of miles deep into the western Pacific, according to IHS Jane's 360.
The bomber groups were traveling within China's extensive Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) in the East China Sea, which Beijing declared in December of 2013. Aircraft are required to submit flight plans and reply to Chinese identification inquiries within the ADIZ, which does not represent a claim of sovereign airspace. Still, the ADIZ was controversial because of its proximity to disputed islands and natural gas fields, as well as the totally unilateral nature of the ADIZ's creation.
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According to Jane's, "An unusually large ... formation of eight bombers supported by three surveillance and electronic intelligence (ELINT) aircraft" flew over the East China Sea within the ADIZ on November 27th.
The eight bombers split into two groups of four bombers each west of the Japanese island of Okinawa, which is home to a large US Marine base. One group of bombers then flew over the Miyako Strait, a body of water near the Japanese island of Miyakojima, before proceeding some some 620 miles (1000 KM) into the Western Pacific.
The flight path put the aircraft within Japan's own ADIZ, after which the four bombers flew into the general area of what's known in Chinese strategic parlance as the "Second Island Chain:" the string of Pacific islands, including the US territories of the Mariana Islands and Guam, lying beyond the so-called "First Island Chain," which consists of Alaska's Aleutian Islands and Japan:
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Here's where the second of the two Chinese bomber groups flew on November 27th, according to Jane's:
Google Maps
This power projection is intended as a strategic hedge against future instability, and Beijing's policy of "offshore defense" explains China's efforts to establish a naval presence in places like the Indian Ocean - and perhaps even as far away as Djibouti and even the Azores, in the Atlantic. But within East Asia, "offshore defense" can take on a more confrontational character, through the construction of artificial islands, provocative naval deployments, and military operations that establish just how far from the Chinese mainland Beijing's military is capable of operating.
Peter Dutton, a strategic researcher at the Naval War College's China Maritime Studies Institute, says that operations like the one on November 27th aren't unusual for China, and he stresses that there was no violation of any other country's sovereign airspace during the operation.
At the same time, the operation showed off Chinese capabilities in a way calibrated to advance its strategic objectives and perhaps put its neighbors on alert.
"Really this is something that is becoming more common," Dutton told Business Insider. "It's the kind of exercise that demonstrates that the Chinese are developing the long-range airpower component of their anti-access, area denial capability."
REUTERS/China Daily
It's possible the flight-path of the November 27th exercise might have been aimed at reminding Taiwan of China's military capabilities in the runup to the breakaway island's January elections.
And the aircraft involved in the exercise may be significant as well. According ot Jane's, China flew bombers during the exercise that only entered service in in 2011. According to Janes, the Xian H6-K has a combat radius of nearly 2,200 miles, and can carry a compliment of wing-mounted cruise missiles - some with an over 1,200-mile range - along with anti-ship missiles