US flies its most ‘Tech-Savvy’ aircraft near Chinese Nuclear Submarine Base Hainan
According to online flight tracking data, RC-135U aircraft, serial number 64-14849, flew a mission near China’s southern coast on June 6, including around Hainan Island and into the Gulf of Tonkin.
Incidentally, the route taken by the RC-135U was similar to one taken by a US Navy EP-3E Aries II, another electronic intelligence gathering platform, when it collided with a People’s Liberation Army J-8 fighter jet back in 2001.Last night, USAF RC-135U Combat Sent 64-14849 flew a collection sortie over the South China Sea, just off the coast of the Southern Theater and Hainan Island. Included are points in China and the South China Sea on areas tagged as "military use" on OpenStreetMaps. #ADSB #AE01D5 https://t.co/EfSFt5SDoT pic.twitter.com/Ufi9WdWbQQ
— Amelia Smith (@ameliairheart) June 6, 2022
On June 3, the same RC-135U had conducted another sortie that took it near locations along much of China’s central and northern coastlines. Both sorties were conducted from Kadena Air Base in Japan.Same USAF RC-135U #AE01D5 is operating along the coast of Guangdong and Hainan now, June 6. Of the US reconnaissance aircraft, RC-135U is perhaps the most aggressive, and its main target is likely to be radars deep in mainland China instead of Chinese maritime activities. https://t.co/fOFIwe3h2p pic.twitter.com/dVecRSpeKn
— SCS Probing Initiative (@SCS_PI) June 6, 2022
In its recent mission, the RC-135 could potentially have used the route to collect data on various Chinese assets on the Woody and Paracel Islands.Over the weekend, however, Just a portion. "Chinese official in Beijing confirmed to The Washington Post that “a portion of the [Cambodia] base” will be used by “the Chinese military.” The official denied it was for “exclusive” use by the military..." https://t.co/9MXhVEO991
— Julian Ku 古舉倫 (@julianku) June 6, 2022
The emergence of the RC-135U off the coast of China comes after a big PLA show of force directed at Taiwan last week.WATCH: China PLA Navy Type 071 amphibious transport dock Kunlun Shan, Type 072A dock landing ship Laotie Shan, Type 073A landing ship Mount Song conduct simulate amphibious landing and island seizure in South China Sea recently. pic.twitter.com/ShunfMsFi7
— Ryan Chan 陳家翹 (@ryankakiuchan) June 3, 2022
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