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Pentagon accuses Chinese of blinding Djibouti-based U.S. pilots with lasers

Two U.S. pilots tagged by Chinese lasers while flying over Djibouti needed medical treatment.

by Courtney Kube and Corky Siemaszko /
Image: Chinese People's Liberation Army personnel attend the opening ceremony of China's new military base in Djibouti
Chinese military personnel attend the opening ceremony of China's new military base in Djibouti on Aug. 1.AFP - Getty Images

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U.S. forces fighting terror in the Horn of Africa are facing a new threat — lasers fired from the new Chinese military base in Djibouti.

Two American fliers have already been injured, prompting the State Department to lodge a formal protest with Beijing and the military to warn pilots to exercise caution “due to lasers being directed at U.S. aircraft on a small number of separate occasions over the last few weeks.”

"Lasers pointed at aircraft have the potential to cause serious harm to the air crew and the surrounding area," the Pentagon said in a statement. "Two pilots in a C-130 suffered minor eye injuries."

"Reports by the pilots indicated that on three of these incidents the lasers originated from the nearby Chinese base and the lasers were of military grade."

Image: A Marine assigned to Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron (VMM) 166, mans the rear cargo hatch during a flight over Camp Lemonnier and surrounding area
A Marine mans the rear cargo hatch of an MV-22 Osprey during a flight over Camp Lemonnier and the surrounding area in November 2013. Ensign Alexander Perrien / U.S Navy file

The dangerous development comes as relations between the U.S. and China have been strained by President Donald Trump’s decision to slap up to $50 billion worth of tariffs on China.

The Pentagon has about 4,000 people based in Djibouti at Camp Lemonnier, which is the primary base of operations for the U.S. Africa command and the only permanent U.S. military base in Africa.

It is has served as the springboard for U.S. operations against jihadists in Somalia and Yemen.

But last month the Djibouti government temporarily grounded all military flights at the base after two mishaps involving two U.S. aircraft on two different days.

The Chinese, however, are new to the neighborhood. They opened their base in Djibouti last July and it is the first overseas Chinese military support operation — a clear sign of how strategically important this fast-developing but still poor Muslim nation of 1 million people is to the superpower.

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