B-52 Bombers Conduct 'Training 'Mission' With Japan Over East China Sea



Two Boeing B-52 long-range, subsonic, jet-powered strategic bombers recently conducted an "integration training" mission with the U.S. Navy and the Japan Air Self Defense Force (JASDF) over the East China Sea. 

statement issued by the U.S. Pacific Air Force (PACAF) last month indicated that two B-52s departed from Andersen Air Force Base in Guam, linked up with McDonnell Douglas F-15 Eagles assigned to the Kadena Air Base in Japan. The mission was conducted on March 20. 


"Training missions and patrols of the contested waters are not unheard of, having become a regular exercise by American forces. The US' use of bombers in the region has been going on for more than 10 years as part of its Continuous Bomber Presence, a mission Washington says is "in support of a free and open Indo-Pacific."


In response to the U.S. led military exercise, the People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAF) conducted an exercise of their own, on March 30, with six Xian H-6 bombers, additional reconnaissance aircraft, and fighter jets, across the Miyako Strait, a waterway which lies between Miyako Island and Okinawa Island. 
The U.S. and Japan have routinely carried out air defense training missions in the East China Sea, home to the Japanese-controlled Senkaku Islands. 

The U.S. has repeatedly used freedom of navigation (FON) to sail its Arleigh Burke-class destroyers in the South China Sea, near China's militarized islands. B-52s have made regular flights near some of these highly contested areas. Beijing has blasted these missions as "provocations."