Japan denies Chinese claim of dangerous fighter-jet conduct
Tokyo: Japan has lashed out at China over claims its fighter jets obstructed Beijing's military aircraft, saying the allegation was "clearly untrue".
China's defence ministry said two Japanese F-15s launched "decoy flares" in international airspace over the East China Sea on Saturday, actions it called "dangerous and unprofessional".
Tokyo denied anything was fired during the encounter, and said it had protested to Beijing over the allegation.
"It is extremely regrettable that the Chinese defence ministry one-sidedly made a clearly untrue announcement," Japan's top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told reporters on Sunday.
The two countries intermittently spar over claims of air and sea misconduct in and above the waters of the East China Sea, where they are engaged in a row over the ownership of uninhabited islands.
China did not give details about its manoeuvres, but said its aircraft had been carrying out "routine far seas training" when they passed through the Miyako Strait in the Okinawan chain.
The strait is a pinch point in Japan-China relations because it is one of the few egresses into the Pacific Ocean for Chinese ships and aircraft that avoid Japanese airspace.
Beijing's growing military is keen to flex its muscles and push further afield as it develops a "blue seas" navy capable of operating far from home waters, but is hemmed in by the Japanese archipelago.