katero
Jun 27, 2026

Small Plane Hits Beijing's Tallest Tower; Was Someone Sending China A Message?


print-iconprint-iconAdd ZeroHedge as a preferred source on Google

A serious airspace breach occurred in Beijing's Central Business District earlier Friday, when a Sunward SA60L Aurora light aircraft crashed into the 1,700-foot-tall CITIC Tower.

The incident is a major wake-up call for Beijing's airspace defenses, not only in the financial district but also around CITIC Group, one of China's major state-owned financial and investment conglomerates.

The crash has already sparked speculation among some observers that there may be a lot more to the story.

A single-engine Sunward SA-60L Aurora aircraft with registration B-12PP, flown by a lone pilot struck the CITIC tower in Beijing, reportedly around the mid-levels, around 65th floor area today.

The aircraft was completely damaged on impact, also made a visible hole in the glass… pic.twitter.com/ffgTdTffmE

— FL360aero (@fl360aero) June 26, 2026

X user Guo Shen reported that the Sunward SA60L Aurora light aircraft departed from Shifosi Airport in eastern Beijing and was expected to return for an approach to Runway 18 before turning westbound toward the Guomao Central Business District. It then struck the 528-meter CITIC Tower.

Shen said the plane was an ultralight aircraft - not a high-speed military - making the incident less about kinetic capability and more about airspace control. The failure to prevent a low-and-slow altitude aircraft exposes massive security failures by Beijing.

She explained further:

  • A general-aviation training plane breached airspace over one of China's most tightly controlled cities and struck a 528-meter skyscraper in the heart of Beijing.
  • Airspace near Beijing's CBD is normally restricted for this class of aircraft, meaning the restriction regime failed to prevent the breach.
  • The pilot is presumed dead. It was a solo flight, and light-sport aircraft do not have ejection systems.
  • Flight-path data reportedly shows the aircraft maintained a constant 270-degree heading after skipping the planned approach turn, raising questions about whether this was a simple navigation error.

  • Videos of the impact, falling debris, and façade damage circulated on X within minutes, narrowing Beijing's censorship window before authorities could shape the official narrative.

Other posts