China turns over remains of US World War II fliers

In this photo provided by the US Navy, a girl presents a white chrysanthemum flower during a ceremony marking the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, Friday, Aug. 14, 2015, in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Mayors and city council members from Honolulu and Nagaoka, Japan, joined the US Pacific Fleet commander to lay wreaths and unveil a new plaque.  AP FILE PHOTO

In this photo provided by the US Navy, a girl presents a white chrysanthemum flower during a ceremony marking the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, Friday, Aug. 14, 2015, in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. AP FILE PHOTO

BEIJING — China has handed over the remains of what are believed to be three American fliers killed in a plane crash in Tibet during World War II.

The ceremony in the city of Chengdu is a reminder of the strong cooperation between the US and China’s then-Nationalist Party government in the struggle against Japan.

The 28 human bones were found in and around the wreck of a C-87 transport plane that crashed in 1943 while flying over the Himalayas between China and India. They are believed to be from members of the US military.

In more recent years, Beijing’s current communist government and Washington have been viewed as locked in a struggle for military supremacy in Asia.

Despite that, exchanges between their militaries have grown in both scale and depth.

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