New Zealand on Saturday rejected Chinese criticism of a military patrol aircraft operation carried out near Chinese airspace and waters, saying the mission was consistent with international mandates and framed by established procedures.
China’s foreign ministry on Friday accused a New Zealand P-8A patrol aircraft of having "conducted continuous close-in reconnaissance and harassment in the airspace and waters of the Yellow Sea and East China Sea" and said the manoeuvring "undermined China’s security interests, increased risks of misunderstanding and miscalculation, and gravely disrupted the order of civil aviation," according to an official transcript of the ministry’s comments.
In response, the New Zealand Defence Force provided a public statement defending the flight and explaining its purpose. The defence force said the Royal New Zealand Air Force aircraft "has been undertaking activities that monitor North Korean sanctions evasions at sea in North Asia under UN Security Council resolutions" and emphasised the legal and procedural conduct of the crew.
The statement added that "The New Zealand Defence Force crew operated professionally and in accordance with international law and civil aviation procedures for the region." It also noted that Wellington has repeatedly described the deployment as "a longstanding deployment enforcing UN-mandated sanctions on North Korea."
The exchange comes amid a period of strained ties. Relations between the two governments were reported to have been under pressure since February last year, when Chinese navy vessels conducted live-fire exercises in the Tasman Sea close to New Zealand. Leaders from both nations later met in June on New Zealand soil and discussed the part trade plays in strengthening bilateral relations.
The New Zealand defence statement framed the patrol as a targeted effort to enforce international sanctions, while the Chinese foreign ministry framed the activity as a security concern that raised the possibility of miscalculation and interfered with civil aviation order. Each side therefore presented its position in terms that underline differing assessments of the flight’s purpose and regional implications.
Neither statement indicated further operational details or immediate diplomatic steps beyond the public comments. The public record of the incident is limited to the statements from the two governments and the previously noted recent interactions between their leaders.