logo
U.S. condemns 'dangerous' Chinese maneuvers after close encounter with Philippine plane

U.S. condemns 'dangerous' Chinese maneuvers after close encounter with Philippine plane

Yahoo19-02-2025

HONG KONG — The United States condemned Wednesday what it called 'dangerous maneuvers' by China after a Chinese navy helicopter flew within 10 feet of a Philippine patrol plane in a disputed area of the South China Sea.
The incident took place Tuesday morning local time as a plane belonging to the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources was flying what Philippine officials said was a routine low-altitude patrol over the Scarborough Shoal, an atoll that is mostly underwater but is rich in fish stocks.
Video shared by the Philippine coast guard showed the Chinese People's Liberation Army navy helicopter hovering above and to the left of the Philippine plane before moving away again in an effort to push the plane out of what Beijing says is its airspace.
'We condemn the dangerous maneuvers by a PLA Navy helicopter that endangered pilots and passengers on a Philippine air mission,' U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines MaryKay L. Carson said in a post on the social media platform X. 'We call on China to refrain from coercive actions and settle its disputes peacefully in accordance with international law.'
The Philippines, the oldest U.S. treaty ally in Asia, has been strengthening its security ties with the U.S., Japan, Australia and others as it increasingly clashes with China in the South China Sea, a strategically important shipping route that Beijing claims virtually in its entirety.
There are a number of territorial disputes in the South China Sea involving China, the Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei and Taiwan. But tensions between China and the Philippines have been especially high in the last two years as they spar over the Scarborough Shoal as well as the Second Thomas Shoal, where the Philippines intentionally grounded a navy ship in 1999 to establish a military outpost.
In a call with his Philippine counterpart last month, Secretary of State Marco Rubio underscored the 'ironclad' U.S. commitment to the Philippines, which it is obligated to defend, and said he shared the Philippines' concern about China's 'dangerous and destabilizing actions' in the South China Sea.
The Philippine plane was carrying personnel from the Philippine coast guard, as well as multiple journalists, officials said.
'You are flying too close, you are very dangerous and it endangers the lives of our crew and passengers,' the video shows the pilot of the Philippine plane telling the Chinese navy helicopter by radio.
The Philippine government said it would issue a formal diplomatic protest over the incident.
'This blatantly hazardous action endangered the safety of the pilots and passengers onboard,' the Philippines' Presidential Office for Maritime Concerns said in a statement Tuesday. 'It demonstrated a lack of regard for internationally accepted norms on good airmanship and flight safety.'
'China's illegal, aggressive and coercive behavior will not deter the Philippines from continuing the conduct of its routine maritime operations in accordance with its sovereignty over the shoal,' the statement continued.
The Chinese military disputed the Philippines' account, saying the plane had illegally entered Chinese airspace and that the Philippines had 'distorted the facts and spread false narratives.'
'The Southern Theater Command organized naval and air forces to track, monitor and warn the aircraft to leave based on laws and regulations,' Col. Tian Junli, spokesperson for the command, said in a statement. 'The Philippine action severely violated China's sovereignty and grossly infringed upon international law.'
The Philippines has accused China of escalating its tactics against its coast guard and other personnel, including the use of water cannons and a military-grade laser, while China also sees the Philippines' behavior in the area as increasingly provocative.
In a dispute brought by the Philippines, an international tribunal in The Hague said in 2016 that Beijing's South China Sea claims were invalid, a ruling that China has never accepted.
The Philippines has also invited local and foreign media to join its air and sea patrols, prompting China to accuse it of 'hyping up' confrontations to gain support from the U.S. and others.
The latest incident between China and the Philippines came a week after Australia accused China of 'unsafe and unprofessional' actions toward an Australian air force plane conducting what it said was a routine patrol in international airspace above the South China Sea. The Australian Defense Ministry said a Chinese PLA fighter jet had released flares within 100 feet of the aircraft.
A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said Thursday that the Australian military plane had deliberately intruded into Chinese airspace and that China had taken 'legitimate, lawful, professional and restrained measures' to expel it.
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Long-awaited Trump-Xi call isn't enough to resolve looming critical mineral shortage this summer
Long-awaited Trump-Xi call isn't enough to resolve looming critical mineral shortage this summer

CNBC

timean hour ago

  • CNBC

Long-awaited Trump-Xi call isn't enough to resolve looming critical mineral shortage this summer

BEIJING — A high-stakes call between the U.S. and Chinese presidents on Thursday has yet to resolve a global shortage of rare earth exports that businesses say could halt production of cars and other industrial parts this summer. Rare earths, along with a broader group of critical minerals, are used in weapons, cars and other high-tech products. China has come to dominate the mining and production of those metals, and over the last two years has gradually started to restrict international sales. In early April, China announced new export controls on seven rare earth elements. Unlike other measures, Beijing did not specify whether they were a response to heightened U.S. tensions. After both sides reached their breakthrough trade agreement on May 12, China's Commerce Ministry said on the same day that it held a meeting to strengthen export controls on critical minerals. There was no broad rollback of the restrictions on seven rare earths. This development came as a surprise to many in Washington, who had expected a repeal of the rare earths restrictions, since the trade agreement had said both countries would suspend most tariffs and roll back countermeasures for 90 days. But so far, only some Chinese suppliers of U.S. companies have received six-month export licenses for rare earths, the American Chamber of Commerce in China said Friday, citing a survey of members from May 23 to 28. Among respondents affected by rare earths controls, 75% said their existing supplies would run out within three months, the survey said. The controls mostly affected sectors involving research and development, resources, industrial and tech, but not consumer or services companies, the survey showed. While China did not mention rare earths in its readout of Chinese President Xi Jinping's call with U.S. President Donald Trump, the long-awaited conversation itself signaled that both countries would continue to talk, following accusations from both sides of violating the trade agreement. "I think we're in very good shape with China and the trade deal," Trump told reporters following Thursday's call. "We have a deal with China, as you know, but we were straightening out some of the points having to do mostly with rare earth magnets and some other things." He did not elaborate. But Trump said U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer would meet their Chinese counterparts at an unspecified time. Further trade talks will likely bring the U.S. and China back to where things stood earlier this year, with limited tariffs, Jianwei Xu, senior economist at Natixis, said Friday. He said China could accelerate some rare earths export approvals for commercial use, in return for the U.S. easing its restrictions on some tech exports to China. "I think both China and the U.S. have figured out that each other's immediate weaknesses are not so much about tariffs, but more about non-tariff issues, especially in tech and rare earths," Xu said. The impact of China's restrictions on rare earths extends beyond U.S. companies. Several European auto parts companies have already had to stop production, industry association CLEPA said Wednesday. It warned of more widespread impact in coming weeks, and said China has only approved about 25% of "hundreds of export license applications" that were submitted. China has recently appeared to ease some export controls, albeit to some European companies, the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China said Friday. But it warned that it was insufficient to "prevent severe supply chain disruptions for many companies." "Our members are still struggling with the export licence approval process, due to both the time it takes and the lack of transparency, and this is now negatively impacting production lines in Europe and other countries," European Chamber President Jens Eskelund said in a statement. Japanese automaker Suzuki Motor briefly suspended production of its Swift car due to China's rare earth curbs, Reuters reported Thursday, citing two unnamed sources, with manufacturing expected to partially resume on June 13. A Suzuki Motor spokesperson was not immediately available to comment when contacted by CNBC. "China's export control measures are consistent with universal practices. Such measures are non-discriminatory and not targeted at any particular country," China's Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Lin Jian said in response to a question about the Japanese automaker on Thursday, according to an official English-language transcript. That echoed Ministry of Commerce Spokesperson He Yongqiang's response to a question last week on Chinese companies restricting sales of a critical mineral stored outside the country at the Netherlands' Rotterdam port. She added during a separate press conference Thursday that China would approve applications for export licenses in line with its regulations, and to "promote convenient and compliant trade." That's according to a CNBC translation of the Chinese. China's restrictions on critical minerals have accelerated in the last several months. Following export controls in Aug. 2023 on gallium and germanium, two metals used in chipmaking, China, a year later, then announced similar restrictions on exports of antimony, which is used in bullets, nuclear weapons production and lead-acid batteries. It can also strengthen other metals. A few months later, China released a broader policy that tightened restrictions on exports of products that could have both civilian and military use. The export controls cover metals such as tungsten that the U.S. has deemed critical. Tungsten is nearly as hard as a diamond, and is used in weapons, semiconductors and industrial cutting machines. There are about 300 grams (10.6 ounces) of tungsten in the average car, the majority of which is lost even with recycling, said Martin Hotwagner, market analyst at Austria-based Steel & Metal Market Research. As supplies run low, he expects Western companies will likely run out of tungsten later this summer.

CNBC Daily Open: Trump and Musk's breakup spills into the markets
CNBC Daily Open: Trump and Musk's breakup spills into the markets

CNBC

time2 hours ago

  • CNBC

CNBC Daily Open: Trump and Musk's breakup spills into the markets

Developments from the White House are growing more exciting and unpredictable than those 1,000-episode Asian drama serials. On Thursday, "So much for being Mr. NICE GUY" Donald Trump reverted to being a nice guy and had a "very good call," in his words, with Chinese president Xi Jinping over trade issues. Following the call, Trump said that officials from both countries will meet to negotiate further. Trump had previously described the process of reaching an agreement with Xi as "extremely hard," while Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that talks between the U.S. and China are "a bit stalled," which makes the positive outcome of the call even more of a breakthrough. But Trump's no longer playing nice with Elon Musk. Just last Friday, the U.S. president at a farewell ceremony to Musk's role at DOGE called the latter "terrific" and said "he will, always, be with us." Starting from the weekend, however, Musk began blasting Trump's "big, beautiful bill," which on Thursday culminated in a public spat between the former compatriots in the White House. Trump acknowledged Thursday that "Elon and I had a great relationship" — note the use of the past tense — but he doesn't know "if we will anymore." Unlike the twists and turns of a television series, however, the White House's relationships with others — a drama equally or more entertaining than fiction to some — have concrete effects on the economy and markets. Tesla's shares, for instance, tanked 14% after its CEO feuded with the U.S. President. A viewer cannot be completely absorbed, lest, in losing themselves in the spectacle, they lose their investments as well. Ugly spat between Trump and Musk U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday called Tesla CEO Elon Musk "CRAZY" and threatened to cut his companies' government contracts as the two men feuded over a major tax bill. In response, Musk said Space X will begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft "immediately." "Without me, Trump would have lost the election," Musk added later. Shares of Tesla sank more than 14% and shed $152 billion in value from the electric vehicle maker. Trump talks to Xi on tradeTrump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping on Thursday had a "very good call" for about 90 minutes which focused "almost entirely" on trade, Trump wrote on Truth Social. He added that U.S. and China officials will meet soon for more talks to resolve an ongoing trade war. Beijing's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and China's embassy in the U.S. said earlier Thursday that Trump had requested the call with Xi. U.S. markets dragged down by TeslaU.S. stocks fell Thursday, weighed down by Tesla shares tanking. The S&P 500 retreated 0.53%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 0.25% and the Nasdaq Composite lost 0.83%. But Microsoft's stocks climbed 0.8% to hit a record and reclaim the title of the world's largest company by market capitalization. Asia-Pacific markets were mixed Friday. India's Nifty 50 was up by 0.95% at 1:45 p.m. in Singapore after the country's central bank slashed interest rates. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index, however, slipped 0.4%. India's central bank delivers outsized cutThe Reserve Bank of India lowered its benchmark policy rate to 5.5% from 6%, the lowest level since August 2022. Economists polled by Reuters had expected the bank to reduce rates by 25 basis points. The decision comes India reported better-than-expected gross domestic product growth in its fiscal fourth quarter. However, the RBI held its full-year GDP estimate at 6.5%, marking a sharp slowdown from the 9.2% seen in the previous financial year. Circle shares pop after IPOShares of Circle Internet Group soared 168% on Thursday after the stablecoin company and its selling shareholders raised almost $1.1 billion in an initial public offering. The stock opened at $69 on the New York Stock Exchange after its IPO priced at $31. At one point, shares traded as high as $103.75. Circle joins Coinbase, Mara Holdings and Riot Platforms as one of the few pure-play crypto companies to list in America. [PRO] Tariffs might benefit LSEThe London Stock Exchange has struggled to entice companies looking to go public — but some market watchers say a tariffs-driven diversification away from the U.S. could help the U.K. win back a greater share of the IPO market. Trump and Musk feud draws reactions from billionaires, politicians and pundits. Here's who said what Trump and Musk seemed inseparable not so long ago: attending events together, doing joint interviews and showering praises on each other. All that changed overnight. Billionaire Bill Ackman on Thursday urged Trump and Musk to stop fighting. The two men should "make peace for the benefit of our great country," Ackman said on X. Tesla bull Ross Gerber, head of Gerber Kawasaki Wealth and Investment Management, had harsh words for Musk in a series of X posts, stating that Elon was "now attacking all the people he helped put in power." Others in Trump's orbit, such as former senior Trump advisor Steve Bannon, who has clashed with Musk in recent months, were also critical of Musk, saying that Trump should sign an executive order to take control of SpaceX.

Nvidia's Jen-Hsun Huang says Chinese competitors are 'quite formidable' just days after the announcement of a Chinese RTX 4060-level GPU powering up
Nvidia's Jen-Hsun Huang says Chinese competitors are 'quite formidable' just days after the announcement of a Chinese RTX 4060-level GPU powering up

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Nvidia's Jen-Hsun Huang says Chinese competitors are 'quite formidable' just days after the announcement of a Chinese RTX 4060-level GPU powering up

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. US export controls have increasingly stopped GPUs with certain AI capabilities from getting into China, and just this week, Nvidia stated the US's ban of H20 chips into the country meant a 'multibillion-dollar write-off' for the tech company. Though these protectionist policies from the US are not keeping China from building its own GPUs, as a new China-made GPU has powered up. Lisuan Technology, a Chinese startup, has been developing the "first self-developed architecture and fully independent intellectual property GPU chip", and it turned on this week. This was announced in a recent WeChat post, alongside additional guarantees to "carry out detailed and comprehensive software and hardware testing and driver optimization work." According to Tom's Hardware, the 6 nm GPU chip is targeting RTX 4060-level performance, and is currently titled the G100. Lisuan has reportedly been working on the G100 since 2023, with plans to launch it in 2023, so there is a level of skepticism around whether or not it can actually hit that RTX 4060 performance level. Despite being a budget card from the last generation, the RTX 4060 is still an impressive card, built on the 5 nm process from TSMC. The smaller the process, the higher the density of transistors, and this results in better performance and efficiency. Effectively, it's harder (and sometimes impossible) to get the same performance out of older processes. The G100 powering on is a good sign for the card, but it's the first of many steps before it can actually see a launch into the Chinese market. Further optimising and just plain testing is needed, especially as it's targeting "the needs of desktops, notebooks, graphic workstations and other devices." Huang tells Bloomberg, "The Chinese competitors have evolved" and Huawei, with its new AI chips, has become "quite formidable." Given that the domestic ability to create processes for the G100 is quite limited, it is likely that Huawei's Ascend 920 and Lisuan's G100 are using silicon from the same Chinese foundry: SMIC. This is all according to estimations from Tom's Hardware. According to Huang, 'Like everybody else, they [Chinese companies] are doubling, quadrupling capabilities every year." This is all to build towards a central point that Huang wants "all of the world's AI researchers and all of the world's developers to be building on American stacks". This is reportedly "irrespective of the near-term revenue success that we have", though opening up sales to a bigger market surely can't hurt the hardware giant. Best CPU for gaming: Top chips from Intel and gaming motherboard: The right graphics card: Your perfect pixel-pusher SSD for gaming: Get into the game first.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store