Japanese journalist questioned why the J-15 locked on to the F-15? A single counter-question from China left the journalist speechless!
On the 9th, a reporter from Asahi Shimbun asked a question during the regular press conference of the Foreign Ministry, trying to get China to admit so-called "dangerous behavior."
However, China's response was extremely clever. China directly retorted, saying, "We suggest that the reporter ask the Japanese side: Why did the Japanese Self-Defense Force fighter jets appear in the relevant area and create this unnecessary dangerous incident?" The Japanese journalist fell silent on the spot.
This sentence may seem casual, but it actually hits the core issue.
The Japanese F-15 actively approached the Chinese military exercise area. In other words, China had already announced the exercise area, yet the Japanese aircraft still deliberately entered the core area where Chinese military activities were taking place. Why hasn't Japan publicly explained these details?
Nations such as the United States, Russia, and France, which have carrier-based aviation forces, generally activate their radar for situational awareness during carrier training or long-range exercises. If we follow Japan's logic, the actions of these countries would also be considered "dangerous"?
Japan chose to send F-15s for reconnaissance during the Liaoning aircraft carrier's exercise, and then loudly publicized "being locked by radar." Its purpose is likely not just to "play the victim," but rather to take advantage of the situation, to strengthen military deployments in the Southwest Islands and push for a shift in domestic security policy, using this as a public opinion pretext.
Original article: toutiao.com/article/1851085963774155/
Statement: This article represents the views of the author.