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U.S. envoys hold 5th meeting with spy plane crew

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Seven vehicles line up next to the U.S. plane in Hainan in this recent satellite image from SpaceImaging.com  

Chinese reject U.S. attempt to end standoff


In this story:

'Not enough'

'Letter of regret'

Calls for patience

RELATED STORIES, SITES icon



HAIKOU, China (CNN) -- U.S. diplomats met for the second day in a row on Tuesday with the crew of a Navy spy plane detained by China after their aircraft collided with a Chinese fighter on April 1.

Brig. Gen. Neal Sealock again headed the U.S. delegation to a 40-minute meeting, the fifth since the incident over the South China Sea.

 VIDEO
CNN's Jamie Mcintyre reports autopilot makes unlikely sudden movement by the U.S. Navy reconnaissance plane

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CNN's Lisa Rose Weaver reports on the meeting live on CNN Monday morning by videophone (April 9)

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Listen to Condoleezza Rice on CNN's "Late Edition" regarding the standoff between the United States and China

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CNN's Rebecca McKinnon reports on comments made Tuesday by a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman
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 IN-DEPTH
graphic U.S.-China Collision: A diplomatic solution
 • About freighter returning EP-3
 • Look: Inside the EP-3
 • Facts about the EP-3
 • Map: Locating the incident
 • Big picture: High stakes
 • Classroom discussion guide
 • Historical US-China timeline
 • Whidbey arrival images
 • Crew speaks out
 • Crew's return images


 
 GALLERY
image Images of some of the U.S. detainees in China
 
 BIG PICTURE
High stakes in standoff
 
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No further details of Tuesday's visit were available. The delegation met with all 24 crew members from the Navy EP-3 for the first time on Monday, and reported the crew was in high spirits and good health.

In Washington, a senior Pentagon official told CNN on Tuesday the collision occurred on the third pass made by the Chinese pilot. The official said that on the first two passes, the Chinese pilot came toward the U.S. plane at a 45-degree angle, about 3 to 5 feet away. The official said the collision resulted in massive damage to the U.S. plane, knocking it off auto-pilot and sending it into a plunge of 5,000 to 8,000 feet before the pilot could regain control.

Meanwhile, the United States and China disagree over the specific wording of any statement to end the standoff. Tensions in the standoff appeared to rise on Tuesday, with patience on both sides appearing to wear thin.

As the confrontation entered its tenth day, neither side appeared ready to make any concessions, with Chinese officials firmly repeating their statement that they did not accept U.S. expressions of "regret."

This was despite warnings from the U.S. that a protracted quarrel could do irreparable damage to U.S.-China relations in the long-term.

At a press conference by the Chinese Foreign Ministry in Beijing, officials said they would only accept a formal apology in which the U.S. admitted it was to blame for the collision on April 1 between the Navy plane and the single seat Chinese fighter jet.

The collision sent the Chinese jet crashing into the sea, while the U.S. plane limped 100km to a nearby Chinese air force base at Lingshui on Hainan Island's south coast.

The Chinese pilot, Wang Wei, has not been found.

Despite Beijing's demands, the U.S. says the collision was an accident and says a formal apology, in line with Beijing's demands, will not be forthcoming.

U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell said at the weekend he was "sorry that a life was lost" in the incident, while President George W. Bush has also expressed "regret" over the incident and sent a personal letter of condolence to the wife of the missing Chinese pilot Wang Wei.

'Not enough'

China has described the statements as a step in the right direction, but says neither are enough to end the standoff.

Late Monday, China rejected the third U.S. draft of a letter aimed at ending the standoff.

U.S. officials in Washington told CNN Monday a fourth letter was being drafted and would soon be sent to Chinese officials. The movement of the letters, one official said, showed continued progress toward a resolution.

Still, several officials of the Bush administration said they could not be sure if the standoff would end soon or if the precise language sought by the Chinese could be formulated.

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A People's Liberation Army soldier stands guard outside the U.S. Embassy in Beijing  

"We're all taking this one day at a time and searching for a way out," one official said.

Meanwhile, a senior Pentagon official has revealed to CNN the U.S. Navy EP-3E plane was on "autopilot" at the time of the collision.

The revelation would seem to contradict the account of a Chinese pilot who said last week that the U.S. plane "suddenly swerved at a wide angle" and hit one of the two fighters, although it's possible the aircraft might have begun a banking maneuver to correct its course while under the automatic control.

'Letter of regret'

U.S. officials say Bush's letter of regret and condolence to the wife of the missing Chinese fighter pilot has been handed over to Chinese authorities.

But at Tuesday's press conference a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman refused to say whether the letter had been delivered.

U.S. officials said they hoped the gesture would undercut some of the rhetoric from Chinese officials about the stance of the U.S. government.

Nonetheless China continues to say the U.S. response to the ongoing standoff is "unacceptable."

"Where is the responsibility? I think it's very clear," said Zhu Bangzao, a Chinese Foreign Ministry official traveling with President Jiang Zemin in Argentina.

"The pronouncements of the United States are unacceptable to the Chinese people."

Some U.S. officials say in many respects the Bush administration has gone as far as it intends to go in its expressions of regret and that the stalemate must end soon or lasting damage to the U.S.-China relationship could be inevitable.

Bush signaled as much earlier in the day when he said, "every day that goes by increases the potential that our relations with China could be damaged and our hope is that this matter gets resolved quickly."

Calls for patience

Meanwhile, U.S. diplomats who have experience with China are urging patience.

"The Chinese are negotiating just as they always do when they hold all of the cards," said former U.S. ambassador to China James Sasser.

Spokesman
China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Sun Yuxi says China will not accept U.S expressions of regret  

"They're going very slowly, very painstakingly, and drawing it out. Now we're really negotiating over words and a question of semantics."

U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan offered Monday to help resolve the standoff.

Speaking in New York, Annan said the two Security Council powers seemed to be making progress, adding that he hopes "direct discussions" will lead to results.

"If my good offices are needed, I'm always available," he told CNN's Richard Roth.

Joseph Prueher, the current U.S. Ambassador to China, said that negotiations aimed at the release of the Navy crew were ongoing, despite the apparent inflexibility of the two positions.

"We are in dialogue with our counterparts and we hope we're moving a little closer to a solution," he said.

But China's critics in U.S. Congress and the Bush administration are pondering possible ways to punish China, including revoking China's favorable trade status with the United States, canceling a planned Bush visit to Beijing in the fall and opposing China's bid to host the 2008 Olympics.



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China gains leverage in U.S. spy plane incident
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RELATED SITES:
USCINCPAC Homepage
The Pentagon
U.S. Navy
Navy Fact File: EP-3E ORION (ARIES II) Aircraft
U.S. Department of Defense
Government of China (in Chinese)
U.S. Department of State
Embassy of the People's Republic of China in the U.S.A.
Government Information Office, Republic of China

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