-Caveat Lector-

This nicely contrasts the ever so popular US views on the crisis. :-)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 17 Apr 2001 04:06:40 +0200
From: Mario Profaca <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "[Spy News]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Spy News] U.S. Seriously Violates International Law

U.S. Seriously Violates International Law (04/15/01)
http://www.china-embassy.org/eng/9807.html

A signed article titled "A Look at the Plane Collision Incident from the
Perspective of International Law" published on April 15 stresses that the
U.S. side breached international law in the collision between a U.S.
military reconnaissance plane and a Chinese fighter jet.

The article by Li Qin presents an in-depth analysis of the airplane
collision from the perspective of international law.

On the morning of April 1, a U.S. EP-3 military reconnaissance plane
conducted military reconnaissance in the airspace near China's island
province of Hainan, and the Chinese side immediately sent up two military
jets to track and monitor the plane. During the flight, the U.S. plane
violated flight rules and veered suddenly towards one of the Chinese jets,
bumping into it and causing it to crash. The pilot of the Chinese jet was
missing with little possibility of his survival. Right after the collision,
the U.S. plane intruded into the Chinese airspace and landed at the Lingshui
Military Airport without permission from the Chinese side, thus seriously
infringing upon the territorial sovereignty of China, the article says.

The article says that after the incident, the United States not only failed
to apologize for the serious consequences of the illegal acts of its plane,
but also made up various excuses to shake off its responsibility, even
making arrogant demands on and unreasonable accusations against the Chinese
side.

Whatever lame excuses the U.S. side might use, the illegal nature of the
acts by the U.S. plane cannot be denied. Consequently, the demands and
accusations by the U.S. side are absolutely untenable from the perspective
of law, the article stresses.

First of all, the United States turned a blind eye to relevant stipulations
in international law, and the U.S. military plane abused the freedom of
overflight, which is the major cause of the collision incident, the article
says.

The U.S. side argued that the April 1 incident took place in international
airspace, where U.S. planes have the right to fly. The article says that the
incident occurred merely 104 kilometers off China's Hainan Island above its
exclusive economic zone.

In accordance with the current of international law, although foreign
aircraft enjoy the freedom to fly over the exclusive economic zone of
another country, such freedom is by no means unrestricted or they must
observe the relevant rules of  international law while enjoying the freedom
of overflight, says the article.

Article 58 of the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea promulgated in 1982
says, foreign aircraft enjoy the freedom of overflight under the relevant
provisions of the Convention.

Section Three of that article made it clear that foreign planes, while
enjoying the freedom of overflight over an exclusive economic zone of other
countries, " shall have due regard to the rights and duties of the coastal
State and shall comply with the laws and regulations adopted by the coastal
State in accordance with the provisions of this Convention and other rules
of international law in so far as they are not incompatible with this part."

According to Article 56 of the Convention, the coastal country concerned not
only has the right to exploit, utilize, maintain and administer natural
resources in its exclusive economic zone, but also enjoys other rights
concerning exclusive economic zones laid down by the Convention, it says.

In accordance with Article 301 of the Convention, any country, while
enjoying its rights or carrying out its duties stipulated by the Convention,
"shall refrain from any threat or use of force against the territorial
integrity or political independence of any State, or in any other manner
inconsistent with the principles of international law embodied in the
Charter of United Nations," the article says.

This article demonstrates that the "other rights" concerning exclusive
economic zone of coastal states include that the sovereignty and territorial
integrity of these countries should not be infringed upon, and they have the
right to safeguard its national security and maintain peaceful order as
stipulated in international law.

The article says that a plane of a state, while it exercises freedom of
overflight in the air over the exclusive economic zone of the other state,
should respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the coastal
state. It can't infringe upon national security and peaceful order of the
coastal state, and any act ignoring the above rights of the coastal country
will constitute an abuse of the freedom of overflight, says the article.

It needs to expound that the above provisions, stipulated in the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, are the generally acknowledged
principles of international law. Even the non-signatory countries should
also abide by these principles, because it is confirmed by international
judicial practice.

The article points out that during the collision incident, the U.S.
trouble-making plane is not a common aircraft, but a military surveillance
plane equipped with advanced electronic surveillance facilities.

Moreover, the U.S. plane did not exercise a common flight over China's
exclusive economic zone, but a reconnaissance mission. The U.S. act is not a
single and accidental one, but a continuation and part of the frequent U.S.
reconnaissance activities in recent years in the airspace over China's
coastal waters, the article notes.

The article says that China is firmly opposed to such provocative and
threatening acts of the U.S., and lodged protests many times, and made
solemn representations in this regard.

The article says that after the collision, the U.S., on several occasions,
criticized China for tracking and monitoring the U.S. military surveillance
planes, and after the U.S. crew members were released, the U.S. attributed
the incident to Chinese plane's tracking operation, trying to shirk its
responsibilities. It is obvious that the criticism is unacceptable in the
political, military and legal sense.

According to international practice and law, when a foreign military plane
is engaged in activities which could threaten a state's national security in
the airspace over coastal waters of a coastal country, it has the right to
take relevant defense measures, including sending planes to track and
monitor the foreign plane.

The article says that the purposes of the activities of the coastal country
are: firstly, to exercise the right of sovereignty authorized by
international law, prevent foreign planes from entering the airspace of its
own country and safeguard its territorial airspace and waters; secondly, to
alert foreign planes not to conduct any activities threatening the
territorial integrity and national security of the coastal country.

In fact, the article points out, it is the common practice for all countries
of the world to track and monitor a foreign military aircraft when it flies
near a country's territorial airspace, and the U.S. practice in this regard
is particularly obvious.

The article says that the U.S. has designated Air Defense Identification
Zone in the airspace near its coastal waters, and the sphere of the zone is
much wider than that of the exclusive economic zone of 200 nautical miles.
The U.S. demands that any foreign planes in the Air Defense Identification
Zone fly according to the U.S. stipulated course, and obey the procedures
the U.S. has prescribed, and if any foreign plane violates these rules, the
U.S. will send its planes to intercept it.

The article says that as Francis Boyler, a U.S. professor of international
law, pointed out that the U.S. would not tolerate it if China took similar
actions like that of the U.S. military plane off Chinese coast within the
U.S. Air Defense Identification Zone.

The article goes on to say that the U.S. plane, after ramming into and
destroying the Chinese plane, entered the Chinese territorial airspace and
landed at a Chinese military airport without authorization, seriously
encroaching upon the Chinese territorial sovereignty.

According to the set principles governing international law, a state has
complete and exclusive sovereignty over the sky above its territory. Without
permission, it is absolutely forbidden for foreign military planes to enter
the territorial airspace of other states. This principle was first stated in
the Paris Convention on the Regulation of Aerial Navigation of 1919. The
Article 1 of the convention stipulates that "the contracting States
recognize that every State has complete and exclusive sovereignty over the
airspace above its territory." Based on this principle, the convention
stipulates that military planes of a signatory to the convention cannot make
unauthorized flights over or landing at the territory of another signatory.

Article 3 of the Convention on International Civil Aviation, concluded in
Chicago in 1944, not only sets the same rule, but also states clearly in
this article to strictly tell civil airborne vehicles from military airborne
vehicles. According to Article 3, "No state aircraft of a contracting State
shall fly over the territory of another State or land thereon without
authorization by special agreement, or otherwise, and in accordance with the
terms thereof." It has been a set rule that foreign military planes cannot
enter into the territorial airspace of another country. Practice against
this rule is deemed as encroachment upon the territorial sovereignty of a
country, which has the right to curb this encroachment with any means
according to international law, the article continues.

In this incident, the U.S. plane did not apply to the Chinese side for
entering the Chinese territorial airspace and landing at the Chinese
territory according to relevant regulations governing emergency cases.
Without permission from the Chinese side, it entered into the Chinese
territorial airspace and landed at a Chinese military airport. Obviously,
illegality is clearly seen in this case of encroaching upon the Chinese
sovereignty, the article says.

The U.S. side contended that after the collision, the U.S. plane was in a
state of emergency, and under such a circumstance, it was not illegal for
the plane to enter into and land at the Chinese territory, out of needs of
averting emergency. Such kind of contention is not tenable according to the
law, says the article.

The international law has only references to civil airborne vehicles and has
no reference to military airborne vehicles. All countries have strict
procedures on this, because state sovereignty and national security are
involved. International law also does not acknowledge what the U.S. called
as an emergency landing right owned by military planes. Under special
circumstances which call for an emergency landing, foreign military planes
must follow domestic laws of the country concerned and get a definite
approval before landing, it says.

It should be pointed out that the communication system of the U.S. plane was
working properly, and the U.S. side had sufficient time and ability to
request the approval for its plane's urgent entering into and landing at the
Chinese territory during 20 minutes from collision to its landing at the
Lingshui Military Airport in China's Hainan Island.

Without requesting, the U.S. plane made an unauthorized intrusion into the
Chinese territorial airspace and an unauthorized landing at the Chinese
military airport. This is a practice that completely ignores China's
sovereignty and territorial integrity. The "avoiding of an emergency"
alleged by the U.S. side cannot at all be considered as a legal proof to
exempt the illegal nature of encroaching upon the Chinese territory by the
U.S. plane. What's more, the state of emergency was a result of the practice
of the U.S. plane itself. To such a foreign military plane that illegally
entered into the Chinese
territorial airspace and landed at an airport demarcated as a military
forbidden zone of China, the Chinese side has the right to self-protection
granted by international law including taking necessary and forcible
measures. The Chinese side, however, did not take such measures after it
entered the Chinese territorial airspace, and this was out of humanitarian
considerations, the article says.

After the collision, the U.S. side did not give any apology. Instead, it
demanded that China return its aircraft and the crew and even warned China
not board the plane and conduct investigations, says the article.

To work out legal excuses for such outrageous demands, the U.S. side went so
far as to fabricate nonsense like the aircraft is part of the U.S. territory
and U.S. state assets, so as to enjoy a sovereign immunity.

It is another version of the extraterritoriality theory popular in the 19th
century. This theory has long been abandoned by modern international law,
the article stresses.

Established principles of international law on this issue are that all
foreign military forces including military personnel and facilities can
possibly enjoy sovereign immunity only after getting permission from
receiving country , which means they are not subject to the administration
of the receiving country.

If foreign military forces crash through the gate of another country without
permission, such military forces can never claim sovereign immunity in this
country, continues the article.

The Restatement (Third) Foreign Relations Law of the U.S., the most
authoritative international law document in the U.S., even holds that only
getting a permission to enter is not enough, and a special agreement should
be reached between a receiving country and a foreign country to ensure this
foreign country can enjoy sovereign immunity in the receiving country,
points out the article.

So, in this case, the article emphasizes, China -- the victim of the
collision, the site of the occurrence of the U.S. illegal acts and the
country the U.S. plane landed on, is entirely entitled to administer the
treatment of the U.S. aircraft and of the whole incident, and conduct
necessary inspections on the plane and necessary inquiries with the crew
members, so as to find out facts about the incident.

In a summary, the article states, the U.S. aircraft misused the freedom of
overflight in the airspace off China's coast, flew against flight rules,
crashed a Chinese jet, and entered into China's territorial airspace and
landed at China's military airport without permission, which have
constituted a case of seriously violating international law.

In this incident, the above-listed illegal acts of the U.S. side have
brought about a severe infringement upon China's rights, interests and
dignity. In accordance with international law, the U.S. should bear state
responsibilities for its illegal acts, including suspending infringement,
compensations for China's losses, promising a non-recurrence of similar
incidents and an apology to China, the article points out.


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