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This photo taken on Sept. 28, 2023, shows an aerial view of a Chinese coast guard ship on patrol near the Chinese-controlled Scarborough Shoal (background) during a maritime surveillance flight by the Philippine Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources over disputed waters of the South China Sea.

This photo taken on Sept. 28, 2023, shows an aerial view of a Chinese coast guard ship on patrol near the Chinese-controlled Scarborough Shoal (background) during a maritime surveillance flight by the Philippine Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources over disputed waters of the South China Sea. (Ted Aljibe/AFP/Getty Images/TNS)

(Tribune News Service) — A Canadian general criticized the Chinese air force over an incident off the coast of the Asian nation where a fighter jet cut off a patrol plane and dropped flares in its path.

The episode on Monday was reported by Global News, which had journalists on the Canadian surveillance aircraft. Chinese fighters also flew within 5.5 yards of the plane, it added.

“They became very aggressive and to a degree we would deem it unsafe and unprofessional,” Major-General Iain Huddleston told the Canadian news outlet. Canada didn’t want to have “anything untoward happen that would result in loss of life,” he said.

The incident highlights China’s frustration over Western military flights near its shores, though they are carried out in international airspace. In May, the Pentagon said a Chinese fighter jet that swerved in front of a U.S. reconnaissance aircraft over the South China Sea behaved in an “unnecessarily aggressive maneuver.”

Last year, Chinese fighters reportedly buzzed Canadian planes in the region and released small pieces of aluminum in front of Australian aircraft.

China claims all of the South China Sea as its territory, and such midair confrontations have the potential to escalate. In 2001, a U.S. Navy surveillance plane collided with a Chinese fighter. The jet crashed and its pilot was never found, while the Navy’s EP-3 landed on the southern Chinese island of Hainan, provoking a ten-day standoff after which the 24 American crew members were finally released.

Canada said the plane involved in the incident Monday was part of a U.N. mission aimed at sanctions against North Korea to encourage the nation to end its nuclear weapons program.

The missions, which include Japan, France and the U.S., are aimed at spotting “evasion activities, in particular ship-to-ship transfers of fuel and other commodities,” according to Ottawa.

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

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