The incident was the second of two encounters the Ottawa’s helicopter had with
Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy J-11 fighter jets over international
waters on October 29, which saw the fighters get as close as 100 feet from the
helicopter, said Maj. Rob Millen, air officer aboard the Royal Canadian Navy
frigate HMCS Ottawa, the warship from which the Sikorsky Cyclone helicopter was
flying.
Canada has international commitments to patrol international waters
China claims a big part of international waters as their own so to legitimize their claim they are dumping sand in parts of the ocean to create islands and they defend it
Defending against international patrols is what these spats you see are
Some countries (such as Canada) tend to err on the side of caution in terms of not causing escalation or an international incident.
Others (such as China , Russia, N Korea) - knowing this - are slowly pushing towards “how much can we get away with, and if there’s an incident we’ll spin it to blame the other guy”.
China has long been trying to expand their borders beyond internationally recognised territory, and rankles at other countries being in that air/sea space prevention them for just saying “this is mine now”.
Passive-aggressive behavior is becoming actually-aggressive behaviour, likely resulting in either an incident where it results in lives lost either because it actually damages an aircraft or somebody shoots back, like what happened with Russia in Turkey.
I agree that China’s claims in the region are incorrect, and it’s bullying its neighbors. But it’s a little silly to say that Canada is erring on the side of caution, when we’re the one with a military helicopter 10 000 km from home.
It’s a little like getting in someone’s face, saying “I’m not touching you! I’m not touching you” and then complaining that they spat on you when they blow a raspberry.
I’m not following this closely at the moment, but I generally assume I’m not getting the full story whenever I see politically convenient narratives forming.
Can someone give me some context as to why Canada is having a conflict with China? It’s like every other day now
Canada has international commitments to patrol international waters
China claims a big part of international waters as their own so to legitimize their claim they are dumping sand in parts of the ocean to create islands and they defend it
Defending against international patrols is what these spats you see are
China is trying to big dick around the Pacific
Some countries (such as Canada) tend to err on the side of caution in terms of not causing escalation or an international incident.
Others (such as China , Russia, N Korea) - knowing this - are slowly pushing towards “how much can we get away with, and if there’s an incident we’ll spin it to blame the other guy”.
China has long been trying to expand their borders beyond internationally recognised territory, and rankles at other countries being in that air/sea space prevention them for just saying “this is mine now”.
Passive-aggressive behavior is becoming actually-aggressive behaviour, likely resulting in either an incident where it results in lives lost either because it actually damages an aircraft or somebody shoots back, like what happened with Russia in Turkey.
I agree that China’s claims in the region are incorrect, and it’s bullying its neighbors. But it’s a little silly to say that Canada is erring on the side of caution, when we’re the one with a military helicopter 10 000 km from home.
It’s a little like getting in someone’s face, saying “I’m not touching you! I’m not touching you” and then complaining that they spat on you when they blow a raspberry.
I’m not following this closely at the moment, but I generally assume I’m not getting the full story whenever I see politically convenient narratives forming.
china needs some proper ass clapping, than this shit will end immediately.
those communist countries think they can get away with everything nowadays.