China lands bombers on South China Sea outpost for first time

In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency and taken Friday, May 11, 2018, two Su-35 fighter jets and a H-6K bomber from the People's Liberation Army air force fly in formation during patrol that included the Luzon Straits also known as Bashi Straits near Taiwan. (Han Chao/Xinhua via AP)

China has landed heavy bombers on one of its outposts in the South China Sea for the first time, part of an operation intended to provide “experience for Air Force bomber units to use islands as their bases,” according to the Defense Ministry.

China sent several advanced H-6K bombers from an undisclosed air base in southern China for “a simulated strike against sea targets before landing on an island in the South China Sea,” an air force statement published on the Defense Ministry’s website said late Friday.

In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency and taken Friday, May 11, 2018, two Su-35 fighter jets and a H-6K bomber from the People’s Liberation Army air force fly in formation during patrol that included the Luzon Straits also known as Bashi Straits near Taiwan. (Han Chao/Xinhua via AP)

The statement did not say where the landing drills took place, but experts confirmed that the bombers had conducted the exercises on Woody Island — China’s largest base in the Paracel chain in the South China Sea — and not the airfields it has built on reclaimed land in the disputed Spratly chain further south.

The division involved in the exercise has taken part in earlier patrols over the western Pacific Ocean and South China Sea, the statement added.

It quoted Wang Mingliang, a researcher at the People’s Liberation Army Air Force Command College, as saying that the takeoff and landing exercises on its South China Sea islands will bolster the air force’s combat capabilities in terms of dealing with maritime security threats.

Beijing has built up a series of military outposts in the South China Sea as it seeks to reinforce effective control of much of the waterway. The Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Taiwan and Brunei have overlapping claims.

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