China Denies Inspecting U.S. Stealth Helicopter In Pakistan

Enlarge this image toggle caption Mohammad Zubair/AP Mohammad Zubair/AP

In a statement, yesterday, China denied a report that Pakistan allowed it to inspect the remnants of the specially modified Black Hawk helicopter that malfunctioned during the Osama bin Laden raid in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

The BBC reports:

"Those reports are entirely groundless and very ridiculous," the Chinese defence ministry said in a statement. Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate also denied the reports.

The team of Navy Seals that undertook the mission tried to destroy the helicopter as they left on a second chopper. But a significant portion of the tail remained intact.

The Financial Times first reported the story on Sunday, saying Pakistan had let China inspect the chopper and take a sample of the "'stealth' skin" that allowed it to enter Pakistan while avoiding radar detection. The FT said it was yet another sign of the "deep mistrust between Islamabad and Washington."

Voice of America, the broadcasting arm of the U.S. government abroad, has more on Pakistan's denial: