Daff,
What the BBC
reported was Chinese State Television saying it was 6 miles.
"A ''Chinese aircraft was conducting normal flight operations
10km (6 miles) south of Hainan Island when a US plane suddenly veered towards it,'' Chinese state television quoted the Foreign Ministry as saying."
CNN is reporting this:
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhu Bangzo said two Chinese military planes were following the U.S. plane to monitor it.
The Chinese planes "were flying normally" about 60 miles
(100 kilometers) southeast of the Chinese island of Hainan when "the U.S. plane suddenly turned toward the Chinese plane," he said, in a statement. "The head and the left wing of the U.S. plane bumped into one of the Chinese planes, causing it to crash."
So who do you want to believe? Their State Television quoting the Foreign Ministry Spokesman or CNN quoting their Foreign Ministry Spokesman? 10 or 100 kilometers? Who dropped or added a zero? I'm sure we'll hear more on this though.

The USN is saying 80 miles.
The EP-3 crew would have had to have been totally up and locked to get within 6 miles of Hainan. It's a huge radar target in ground mapping mode (been there, flown the track).
SOB:
That bet would be won before I even picked up the DT.

Mr. Fish:
Don't want to seem like I'm picking on or nit-picking you, but this is an area I am very familiar with (and am a bit sensitive about).

This statement is simply NOT correct:
"although recon and spying gonna make a fine line in the best of circumstances "
The line is clear and distinct.
If an aircraft is in International Airspace, it is NOT spying. With today's navigation and downlink capabilities, there's no problem verifying this data, either. It will depend on if the Navy publicly releases the data.
[This message has been edited by Toad (edited 04-02-2001).]