- Japan’s Air Self-Defense Force scrambled fighters after detecting a Chinese Y-9 patrol aircraft flying over the East China Sea on March 28
- Japan’s Ministry of Defense said the aircraft had a different nose configuration from previously observed Y-9s, marking the first public identification of this variant by the Self-Defense Forces
Japan’s Ministry of Defense said on March 28 that the Air Self-Defense Force scrambled fighter aircraft after a Chinese military patrol aircraft flew over the East China Sea.
The ministry said one aircraft was detected flying southwest of Okinawa and that Air Self-Defense Force fighters were urgently scrambled in response. The flight path, released in an accompanying operational summary map, showed the aircraft operating in airspace west of Japan’s southwestern island chain.
According to Japan’s Ministry of Defense, Chinese Y-9 patrol aircraft have previously been observed in airspace around the East China Sea. However, officials said the aircraft identified this time differs from previously seen examples.
The ministry said in a statement, “Chinese military patrol aircraft (Y-9) have previously been confirmed flying in airspace around the East China Sea, but the aircraft confirmed this time has a different nose section shape from previous aircraft, and this is the first time the Self-Defense Forces have confirmed and publicly announced such an aircraft.”
That wording is operationally notable because it indicates Japanese defense officials assessed the platform as a new or modified variant of the Y-9 family.
The ministry added, “The Ministry of Defense and the Self-Defense Forces will continue to collect intelligence and conduct warning and surveillance on military movements around our country on a 24-hour basis, while taking every possible measure against airspace violations.”
The Y-9 is a Chinese medium transport and special-mission aircraft platform derived from the Shaanxi Y-8 series. It is widely used for maritime patrol, airborne early warning, electronic intelligence, and anti-submarine warfare roles, depending on configuration.
The images released by Japan’s defense authorities, together with open-source analysis circulated by defense observers, suggest that the aircraft may be a new Y-9FQ / GX-6 anti-submarine warfare variant, identifiable by its revised nose profile and external sensor arrangement. This aircraft is designed to conduct long-range maritime patrol and submarine detection missions, using onboard radar, sonobuoys, magnetic anomaly detection systems, and communications relay equipment to monitor naval activity across the East China Sea and surrounding waters.
The East China Sea remains a key operational environment for regional air and naval forces due to its proximity to Japanese territory, major shipping routes, and strategically sensitive waters near Taiwan and the Ryukyu island chain.


