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South Korea fires hundreds of warning shots at Russian jets

Hundreds of warning shots were fired as four superpowers came dangerously close to conflict over a violation of airspace.

South Korea: Analyst suggests Russian navigation mistake

Four nations faced off in a chaotic confrontation after a Russian military plane twice violated South Korea’s airspace off the country’s eastern coast.

South Korean air force jets fired 360 rounds of warning shots on Tuesday over the violation, Seoul officials said in an announcement that was quickly disputed by Russia.

Japan then scrambled warplanes to intercept, saying it backed South Korea’s claims.

To make matters even more complicated, two Chinese H-6 bombers then arrived at the scene of the confrontation to join the Russian military aircraft, according to South Korea and Japan.

It all began when South Korea said three Russian military planes — two Tu-95 bombers and one A-50 airborne early warning and control aircraft — entered the South’s air defence identification zone off its east coast before the A-50 intruded in South Korean airspace.

Russia said later two of its Tu-95MS bombers were on a routine flight over neutral waters and didn’t enter South Korean territory.

South Korea said it was the first time a foreign military plane had violated its airspace since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

According to South Korean accounts, an unspecified number of South Korean fighter jets, including F-16s, scrambled to the area and fired 10 flares and 80 rounds from machine guns as warning shots.

South Korean air force jets fired 360 rounds of warning shots after a Russian military plane twice violated South Korea's airspace. Picture: AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko
South Korean air force jets fired 360 rounds of warning shots after a Russian military plane twice violated South Korea's airspace. Picture: AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko

Seoul defence officials said the Russian reconnaissance aircraft left the area three minutes later but later returned and violated South Korean airspace again for four minutes.

The officials said the South Korean fighter jets then fired another 10 flares and 280 rounds from machine guns as warning shots.

But the commander of Russia’s long-range aviation forces denied any of the planes violated South Korean airspace and shots were fired.

“If the Russian pilots had identified such a threat to themselves, they would have immediately given an appropriate response,” Lt-Gen Sergei Kobylash said, according to Russian news agencies.

He said South Korean military planes escorted the Russian planes over neutral waters, which he called “aerial hooliganism”.

South Korea’s presidential national security adviser, Chung Eui-yong, told top Russian security official Nikolai Patrushev that South Korea viewed Russia’s airspace violation “very seriously” and would take “much stronger” measures if a similar incident occurred, according to South Korea’s presidential office.

Pavel Felgenhauer, an independent Russian military analyst, told The Associated Press he believed the incursion could have been a navigation mistake. He also suggested the incident would not have serious consequences.

“South Korea right now is not very interested in pressing this into a kind of long-term worsening of relations,” he said.

South Korean national security director Chung Eui-yong says he’s taking the incident ‘very seriously’. Picture: AFP PHOTO / POOL / Alexander Zemlianichenko
South Korean national security director Chung Eui-yong says he’s taking the incident ‘very seriously’. Picture: AFP PHOTO / POOL / Alexander Zemlianichenko

The former Soviet Union supported North Korea and provided the country with weapons during the Korean War that killed millions.

In 1983, a Soviet air force fighter jet fired an air-to-air missile at a South Korean passenger plane that strayed into Soviet territory, killing all 269 people on-board.

Relations between Seoul and Moscow gradually improved, and they established diplomatic ties in 1990, a year before the breakup of the Soviet Union.

The airspace that South Korea says the Russian warplane violated is above a group of South Korean-held islets roughly halfway between South Korea and Japan that have been a source of territorial disputes between the two Asian countries. Russia isn’t part of those disputes.

Japan, which claims ownership over the islets, protested to South Korea for firing warning shots over Japanese airspace.

South Korea later countered it couldn’t accept the Japanese statement, repeating the islets are South Korean territory. Japan also protested to Russia for allegedly violating Japanese airspace.

South Korea said the three Russian planes entered the South Korean air defence identification zone with two Chinese bombers. South Korea said the Chinese planes didn’t intrude upon South Korean airspace.

The Russian statement accused South Korean aircraft of trying to hamper the flights of Russian jets before “a vague missile defence identification area” it said South Korea unilaterally defined.

Russia has raised concerns about the airspace before. Picture: Alexei Nikolsky, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP
Russia has raised concerns about the airspace before. Picture: Alexei Nikolsky, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP

Russia said it had raised its concerns about the zone before.

Before their reported joint flights with the Russian planes, the Chinese warplanes entered South Korea’s air defence identification zone off its southwest coast earlier on Tuesday, South Korea’s Defence Ministry said.

Seoul says Chinese planes have occasionally entered South Korea’s air defence identification zone in recent years.

South Korea’s Foreign Ministry and Joint Chiefs of Staff registered their official protests with Beijing when they summoned China’s ambassador and defence attache.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said she was not clear about the situation but noted the air defence identification zone was not territorial airspace and others were entitled to fly through it.

She took issue with a reporter’s use of the word “violation” to ask about China’s reported activity in South Korea’s air defence identification zone.

“I feel that given China and South Korea are friendly neighbours, you should be careful when using it because we are not clear about the situation,” she said.

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/technology/innovation/military/south-korea-fires-hundreds-of-warning-shots-at-russian-jets/news-story/e4f7fceb5701a399933f345941914919