Two US Pilots Injured By Chinese Military-Grade Lasers In Djibouti, Says Pentagon, As It Lodges Official Complaint

The eye injuries came amid a series of similar incidents dating back weeks, and US officials are demanding Beijing investigate the acts, Pentagon spokeswoman Dana White said

May 4, 2018

Two US pilots have been injured as a result of Chinese nationals shining military grade laser pointers into their eyes as they came in to land at an American base in Djibouti, the Pentagon said on Thursday.

The injuries came amid a series of similar incidents dating back weeks, and officials have issued a formal diplomatic complaint demanding Beijing investigate the acts, spokeswoman Dana White said.

“They are very serious incidents,” White said. “This activity poses a true threat to our airmen.”

In one case, two pilots on a C-130 cargo plane suffered minor eye injuries as they came in to land at the base in the Horn of Africa nation, another spokeswoman, Major Sheryll Klinkel said.

Located at Djibouti international airport, the US military’s Camp Lemmonier base is its only permanent facility in Africa. It is used largely for counterterrorism operations in East Africa and Yemen.

China last year opened a naval base in Djibouti, only a few miles from the US facility, marking the first overseas base for Beijing’s rapidly growing military.

White said she was “confident” that whoever had shone the high-powered lasers was Chinese. She said that the Pentagon filed the formal complaint because of the injuries and the growing number of instances, of which there were below 10 in recent weeks.

Marine Lt. Col. Chris Logan, a Pentagon spokesman, said that reports from pilots indicate that on three occasions the lasers were military grade and came from the Chinese base nearby.

On Wednesday Chinese military observers told the South China Morning Post that the lasers might have been used to scare off birds near the airfield or disrupt possible spy drones, rather than targeting foreign pilots.

They also pointed out that China is a signatory to the Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons, which bans the use of lasers that cause permanent blindness.

“The Chinese and US bases in Djibouti are really close, so one could disturb the other if the two sides don’t have a proper communication mechanism,” said Zhou Chenming, a Beijing-based military analyst.

Zhou noted that China has already publicly demonstrated its use of laser weapons against drones at air exhibitions.

The Chinese military base in Djibouti is just a few miles northwest of Camp Lemonnier, the only permanent US military base in Africa and home to 4,000 US military personnel.

Camp Lemonnier was established after the 9/11 attacks, and is mainly used as a counterterrorism hub in the region. A 2013 Washington Post report said the Djibouti government had forced it to stop drone flights – which numbered up to 16 a day – from the base due to safety fears and relocate its unmanned spy aircraft to a more remote location.