A People’s Republic of China J-11 pilot performs an obstruct of a U.S. Air Force B-52 in the South China Sea on Tuesday. Picture thanks to the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command Oct. 26 (UPI)– A Chinese fighter jet came alarmingly near hitting a U.S. Air Force B-52 bomber over the South China Sea on Tuesday, U.S. authorities stated Thursday. The U.S. Indo-Pacific Command stated the U.S. airplane was legally carrying out regular operations in global airspace when a People’s Republic of China J-11 pilot came within 10 feet of the airplane. Throughout the nighttime obstruct, which was recorded on video, authorities state the Chinese pilot flew “in a hazardous and less than professional way” with extreme speed, weaving above and listed below the U.S. airplane. “We are worried this pilot was uninformed of how close he concerned triggering an accident,” the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command stated in a press release. The occurrence comes a bit more than a week after the Department of Defense launched images and videos that highlight supposedly harmful functional conduct by the People’s Liberation Army directed at U.S. airplane operating lawfully within the surrounding global airspace. DOD authorities think that the risky interceptions of U.S. and allied airplane in worldwide airspace is collaborated and purposeful effort by the Chinese. Recently, Ely Ratner, the assistant secretary of defense for Indo-Pacific security affairs resolved the media at the Pentagon to talk about the risks presented by Chinese intercepts to local peace. “Since the fall of 2021, we have actually seen more than 180 such occurrences– more in the previous 2 years than in the years before that,” Ratner stated. “That’s almost 200 cases where PLA operators have actually carried out negligent maneuvers, or released chaff, or shot off flares or approached too quickly or too near U.S. airplane.” The U.S. Indo-Pacific Command Joint Force stated it plans to preserve a “totally free and open Indo-Pacific area” are prompted all countries in the Indo-Pacific to run securely within worldwide airspace while appreciating worldwide law.