
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
MANILA (Worthy News) – China is flexing its military muscles in the Indo-Pacific region, with pilots of civilian aircraft anxiously hearing about Chinese live-fire naval exercises while on the ground in the Philippines, suspected high-profile Chinese spies were detained.
Pilots first heard about a Chinese live-fire naval exercise near Australia last week when already in the air, Worthy News learned. They received messages that forced some to change paths through a busy air corridor, according to satellite text messages to and from pilots.
It underscored how pilots increasingly have to react at short notice to geopolitical disruptions and military hazards, such as missile and drone barrages between Israel and Iran last year.
Late last year, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev called on Russia to accept blame for a plane crash on Christmas Day that killed 38 people. That plane was thought to have come under fire from Russian air defense systems as it tried to land in Chechnya before being diverted to Kazakhstan, where it crashed.
However, aircraft currently have to deal with new challenges: According to Western defense analysts, China’s military, in its first drills in the Tasman Sea between Australia and New Zealand, is raising tensions by being more assertive across the Indo-Pacific region, including near Taiwan.
Pilots first heard about the exercises when a Virgin Australia pilot picked up a Chinese navy broadcast on the
Pilots use a 121.5 MHz emergency radio channel to communicate between planes at 9.58 a.m. Sydney time last Friday, according to Australian officials.
AUSTRALIA MILITARY
According to Airservices Australia, the pilot reported the broadcast to an air traffic controller, who passed the message to Australia’s military.
Later, other aircraft were alerted amid broader concerns about China’s actions.
China has said it gave adequate warning to Australian and New Zealand authorities about the exercise, but authorities and pilots have their doubts.
The details emerged while in the Philippines, there was concern that four Chinese nationals accused by the Philippines of espionage led Chinese Communist Party-affiliated groups that made donations of cash to a Philippine city and vehicles to two police forces.
Wang Yongyi, Wu Junren, Cai Shaohuang, and Chen Haitao were among five Chinese men detained by Philippine investigators in late January.
They allegedly gathered images and maps of Philippine naval forces near the South China Sea.
The Philippines is a close ally of the United States, and its strategic location puts Manila close to key trade routes and geopolitical flashpoints in the Indo-Pacific, notably Taiwan and the South China Sea.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
As the Israeli prime minister visited the nation, Hungary announced Thursday that it would withdraw from the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.
Mass protests against Hamas continued in Gaza on Wednesday—following two days of demonstrations last week, marking the most significant unrest in 18 months—as the terror group tortured and killed two protesters, threatened a crackdown, and drew vows of revenge from the victims’ families.
A night raid by suspected Fulani militants in Bokkos County, Nigeria, left 11 Christians dead, including a pregnant woman, her husband, and a 10-year-old girl.
A house church pastor was sentenced to five years in prison, according to a magazine covering religious liberty and human rights in China.
Between Wednesday night and Thursday morning, the Israeli Air Force carried out widespread strikes across Syria, targeting military bases and facilities from the Assad regime era — a move widely seen as a warning to Turkey.
The secretary general of the NATO military alliance on Thursday mourned four American soldiers who were killed during a military exercise in Lithuania.
President Donald Trump and some Republicans were quick to shrug off stock losses Thursday as the market responds to a jolt from Trump’s reciprocal tariffs.