Because there's only two planes on routine S China Sea supply trip
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06/03/2021, 21:04:19




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Malaysia’s claim that 16 Chinese warplanes took part in South China Sea ‘intrusion’ greeted with scepticism over numbers involved

  • Defence analysts question the number of planes cited by the Royal Malaysian Air Force, saying it posed a major logistical challenge
  • One Chinese military source has said there were only two planes involved, which delivered supplies and carried out a training mission
Kristin Huang
Published: 7:00pm, 3 Jun, 2021

Malaysia’s accusation that 16 Chinese military transport aircraft had been involved in an “intrusion” near its coastline has been greeted with scepticism by analysts who questioned the practicality of carrying out the operation on such a large scale.

They said that the vast distance from China’s own coast and the limited facilities available in Chinese-held parts of the disputed South China Sea, meant it would have been an “immense logistical feat” to carry out an operation on such a scale.

On Monday, Malaysia’s air force said it had detected “suspicious” activities near the Malaysian-administered Luconia Shoals.

It said Malaysian interceptors had identified 16 aircraft in the formation – consisting of Ilyushin IL-76 and Xian Y-20 transport planes — and released pictures taken at the time showing individual IL-776 and Y-20 planes.

China, which has insisted that its actions were in accordance with international law and not targeted at any country, has not commented on the number of planes involved.

However, a source inside the Chinese military with direct knowledge of the situation, has previously said that China had only dispatched two transport planes to the South China Sea to deliver supplies to troops stationed there, adding that they had then conducted a further exercise to familiarise themselves with the weather and conditions in the area.

Ridzwan Rahmat, principal defence analyst at Janes, said it was unlikely that China would have sent 16 transport planes on one mission.

“I am quite perplexed to see that the Malaysians had spotted 16 aircraft,” Rahmat said. “China has sent squadrons to the South China Sea before, but not on this scale. So I do wonder how they got this number.”

Rahmat said the claim that 16 aircraft were involved in the latest exercise seemed quite a stretch.

Earlier this year, the PLA’s Southern Theatre Command conducted a long-distance training exercise involving 10 H-6 bombers, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

“It’s quite unusual for China to deploy 16 aircraft at one go. In terms of operations, it is an immense logistical feat to deploy that many aircraft, and will certainly put a dent in the formation fuel allocation for the year,” Rahmat said.

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Related link: Malaysia’s claim that 16 Chinese warplanes took part in South China Sea ‘intrusion’ greeted with scepticism over numbers involved






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