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Pacific Fleet admiral flies over disputed waters

In a move likely to irk China, the new U.S. commander of the Pacific Fleet joined a seven-hour surveillance flight over the disputed South China Sea aboard one of America’s newest spy planes.

Adm. Scott Swift took part in the surveillance mission on a P-8A Poseidon plane

Saturday to witness the aircraft’s full range of capabilities, the U.S. Pacific Fleet said Sunday.

Territorial disputes involving China, the Philippines and several other nations have flared on and off for years, creating fears that the South China Sea could spark Asia’s next major armed conflict.

Beijing has asked the United States to stay out of what it says is a purely Asian dispute, but Washington has said that ensuring freedom of navigation in the disputed waters and the peaceful resolution of the conflicts are in the U.S. national interest.

The Chinese Embassy in Manila had no immediate reaction to the Pacific Fleet commander taking part in the surveillance flight.

The Navy has acquired and plans to purchase more of the versatile P-8A Poseidon aircraft to replace its aging P-3 Orion fleet. The plane can be used for a range of undertakings, including anti-submarine warfare and surveillance missions.

A picture posted by the Pacific Fleet on its website shows Swift intently looking on as U.S. officers demonstrate the P-8A’s capabilities.

U.S. Navy Capt. Charlie Brown, a Pacific Fleet public affairs officer who flew with Swift aboard the P-8A, said by telephone that the admiral “was pleased with the capabilities of the Poseidon.”

Brown did not say whether the plane flew over disputed areas where China has undertaken island-building that Washington has asked Beijing to stop.

In May a U.S. Navy P-8A was shooed away by radio callers, who identified themselves as being from the Chinese navy, when the surveillance aircraft flew over a disputed area. A CNN reporter who was aboard the plane, which had taken off from the Philippines, reported the incident.

Swift took part in Saturday’s surveillance mission after a visit to Manila, where he met top Philippine military officials. He flew to South Korea during the weekend and will visit Japan before returning to Hawaii, where the U.S. Pacific Fleet is headquartered.

Swift assumed command of the fleet, among the world’s largest, in May.

Philippine Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin welcomed Swift’s move, saying it showed America’s commitment to come to the aid of allies locked in territorial disputes with China.

“Militarily we are nothing against China,” Gazmin said. “That’s why we have been asking our allies to assist us.”

In an interview with reporters Friday in Manila, Swift assured U.S. allies that American forces are well equipped and ready to respond to any contingency in the South China Sea.

Swift said he was “very satisfied with the resources that I have available to me as the Pacific Fleet commander.”

The U.S., Swift stressed, doesn’t take sides in the territorial rifts, but would press ahead with operations to ensure freedom of navigation in disputed waters and elsewhere.

“The United States has been very clear that it does not support the use of coercion and force,” he said.

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