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(continued)
(2) Yesterday, there was a snowstorm in New England. The snowfall was about half a foot, but city and state were shut down, as usual. It was surprising that newspaper delivery was accomplished in at least some neighborhood. But only one library was open in greater Boston area, which had reeived no newspaper of the day. So I will cite from YESTERDAY's newspapers--which I will remind you were written on Jan 11 (the same day the VOA Chinese piece was written; the latter was published online so it got to come out a day earlier than the print newspapers). The following print newspapers both took the position that Pres. Hu did not know in advance.
(a) Elizabeth Bumiller and Michael Wines, China Tests Jet as Gates Visits; Hu is seen as surprised by show of force. New York Times (NYT), Jan 12, 2011 (title in the print).
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/12/world/asia/12fighter.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=j-20&st=cse
Quote:
"A senior American defense official said that when Mr. Gates asked Mr. Hu to discuss the test it was evident to the Americans that the Chinese leader and his top civilian advisers were startled by the query and were unprepared to answer him. Photos of the flight of the radar-evading J-20 had been prominently posted on unofficial Chinese military Web sites a few hours before the meeting.*
* Right after this sentence, in the print but NOT online, NYT has this paragraph: "'It was clear the civilian leadership was uninformed,' the official said.
"Chinese officials provided only a brief summary of the meeting between Mr. Gates and Mr. Hu and did not address the perception by Pentagon officials that Mr. Hu had not been informed of the test.
"Some American officials speculated that the test flight was meant in part as an act of defiance against Mr. Hu, who has ordered the Chinese military to try to smooth over years of rocky relations with the Pentagon. Mr. Gates made the trip here at the invitation of Mr. Hu, who is to meet with President Obama at the White House next week and by all accounts is eager for his American visit to be a success.**
** Regarding the sentence of the report: Mr Hu "by all accounts is eager for his American visit to be a success." It has been widely reported, since White House announced a month ago Pres. Hu would conduct a "state visit" in January, that Pres. Hu has made a wide-ranging concessions.
"Joseph S. Nye Jr., a Harvard professor and a former assistant secretary of defense who was in Beijing on Tuesday for a conference on United States-China relations, said it was not a complete surprise to him that Mr. Hu appeared uninformed of the test flight. 'The Chinese military often sets its own agenda on day-to-day operations without political approval,' he said.
PLA "first rolled out the plane last week, in what was regarded as a tough-minded welcome to Mr. Gates before he even arrived. Mr. Gates, however, reacted by playing down the spectacle. In comments to reporters on his plane en route to Beijing, he questioned 'just how stealthy' the Chinese fighter really was.
Describing the last three J-20 tests in chronological order: on last Thrusday, last Friday and Tuesday: J-20 "then reappeared on Thursday for another high-speed runway test, almost taking off before parachutes popped out and slowed it to a halt. That test was watched by a crowd of luminaries ferried to the site in a Boeing 737, according to Mr. [Andrei] Chang, the military expert. On Friday, two planeloads of officials watched another runway test, this time staging a ceremony and snapping pictures of themselves with the test pilot. Yet another large crowd witnessed Tuesday’s first flight, Mr. Chang said.
(b)
(i) Jeremy Page and Julian E Barnes, China Shows Its Growing Might; Stealth Jet Upstages Gates, Hu. Wall Street Journal, Jan 12, 2011.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704428004576075042571461586.html
Quote:
"Citing diplomatic protocol, the U.S. officials declined to make public further details about how exactly Mr. Hu was informed about the test during the meeting. But television footage showed several uniformed Chinese generals and other senior officers in the room.
(ii) Jeremy Page, Test Flight Signals Jet Has Reached New Stage. Wall Street Journal, Jan 12, 2011.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704515904576075852091744070.html?KEYWORDS=JEREMY+PAGE
Quote:
"The aviation experts say there is a limit to what more they can tell about the J-20's capabilities—especially its radar-evading technology—from the low-resolution images
"China appears to be testing two engines—one Chinese and one Russian * * * [Andrei Chang] said one prototype was likely fitted with a Russian AL-31FN engine, and the other with a Chinese WS-10A.
"The [bigger and heavier] J-20 would allow China to expand the operational range of its fighters to 1,500 kilometers, said Hong Yuan, general secretary of the Center for Arms Control and Nonproliferation Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. * * * Carlo Kopp, head of Capability Analysis at Air Power Australia, an independent defense think tank, said the J-20's size and shape suggested it was designed to be able to fly up to 1,500 miles and back without refueling.
【 在 choi 的大作中提到: 】
: About the alleged first test-flight of J-20?
: VOA Chinese yesterday presented an intriguing viewpoint, that Pres. Hu and
: his men feigned ignorance about the test flight.
: (1) The following is the talk Secretary of Defense Robert Gates gave
: immediately after his meeting with Pres. Hu. Judgi
: (以下引言省略...)
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