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The altercation between the two militaries was the most public since tensions spiked in 2001 when a U.S. spy plane and Chinese fighter jet collided in international air space off Hainan, killing the Chinese pilot and forcing the American plane to make an emergency landing at a Chinese air base. Occasional minor clashes have followed, none of which have led to a major crisis. The weekend incident comes amid an overwhelmingly positive start to relations between China and the new U.S. administration of President Barack Obama, with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton receiving a warm welcome during a visit to Beijing last month. Clinton's visit was followed by one from David Sedney, U.S. deputy assistant secretary of defense for East Asian security affairs. That marked the first formal military dialogue between the People's Liberation Army and the U.S. since China canceled or suspended nearly a dozen military exchanges last year in protest over a U.S. arms sale to rival Taiwan. Despite the positive momentum in ties, the U.S. military remains wary of China's rapid military buildup, fueled by double-digit annual percentage increases in the defense budget.
In a report on his visit, Sedney noted U.S. worries about opaque Chinese defense spending, a weapons buildup across from Taiwan and arms sales to Iran that the Obama administration believes are hurting stability in the Middle East by fueling terrorism. Calls to China's Defense Ministry rang unanswered Tuesday.
[Associated
Press;
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