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Chinese bomber runs near Guam aimed at sending message to US: Analysts

WASHINGTON — China has flown bombers near the United States territory of Guam, an American news website reported, in a move analysts said was part of a deterrence strategy aimed at the United States.

The Chinese air force's H-6K bomber. Photo: Reuters

The Chinese air force's H-6K bomber. Photo: Reuters

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WASHINGTON — China has flown bombers near the United States territory of Guam, an American news website reported, in a move analysts said was part of a deterrence strategy aimed at the United States.

The H-6K Badger warplanes – which are armed with 1,600km-range air-launched cruise missiles – are testing US defence zones around Guam, the Military Times quoted unnamed US defence officials in the region as saying on Tuesday (Oct 31).

China’s bomber runs targeting Guam were part of a range of activities making US forces in the territory worry about the potential threat from Beijing – even as North Korea pursues its nuclear weapons programme, the report said.

“It’s very common for (People’s Republic of China or PRC) aircraft to intercept US aircraft” these days, one of the officials said. “The PRC is practising attacks on Guam.”

China’s recent activities in the area suggested it was preparing to defend expanded boundaries, according to the officials.

“We now have, on a daily basis, armed Chinese Flanker fighters and Japanese aircraft” coming in close proximity of each other, the officials said, adding that intercepts between the US and China were also increasing.

The H-6K, a strategic bomber that entered service in 2009, is designed for long-range attacks and could strike US carrier groups and other priority targets in Asia.

It has a combat range of 2,000km, while the missile it carries extends the bomber’s strike range to over 3,000km.

The bombers were used to patrol the Scarborough Shoal area of the South China Sea – an area claimed by both Beijing and Manila – in July last year, according to Chinese state media.

Dr Collin Koh, a maritime security expert at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, said China was trying to strengthen its deterrence capability by pushing further into the western Pacific Ocean.

“I believe China is first and foremost keen to intensify measures closer to shore, but pushing the envelope further out into the western Pacific also serves the purpose of enhancing deterrence against the US, with an overall strategic aim of raising the costs of Washington if it chooses to intervene militarily in, say, Taiwan or the East China Sea,” Dr Koh said.

China first revealed its new-generation H-6K strategic bomber at a military parade in 2015 marking the 70th anniversary of the end of the Second World War. The new aircraft will be equipped with DH-20 land-attack cruise missiles, putting Australia within striking distance. At present, only Russia and the US can launch cruise missiles from the air.

But military experts said shortfalls in the design would hold back its combat capabilities.

“Without mid-air refuelling and proper fighter escorts, these bombers are essentially sitting ducks out over the open western Pacific,” Dr Koh said.

Given the limitations, military analyst Zhou Chenming said China was mainly using the warplane for near-shore operations.

“It’s absurd for China to deploy H-6Ks to attack Guam because Chinese missiles – or even nuclear weapons – can do the same job without dispatching personnel. Currently, those bombers mainly fly around Taiwan, sending a message to the island’s pro-independence forces,” Mr Zhou said. SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

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