More than two dozen flights by four Chinese airlines bound for the country will be suspended by the U.S. government over the next month in an act of retaliation against Beijing's similar suspension of American flights, the U.S. announced Thursday. 

American officials cited China's cancellation of 26 American-bound flights as the reason for the decision.

The U.S. Department of Transportation also claims that Chinese authorities implemented a policy earlier in August where if 4% of passengers on a China-bound flight tested positive for COVID-19, it would be suspended. Two flights would be suspended if it reached 8%.

The U.S. decision, which impacts flights from Sept. 5 to Sept. 28, affects Xiamen, China Southern Airlines, Air China and China Eastern Airlines. 

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Plane at airport

Boeing 747-8i operated by Chinese airline Air China at Shanghai airport (iStock)

Nineteen of the suspended flights are from Los Angeles, while the remaining seven are from New York.

Liu Pengyu, spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, criticized the Transportation Department's announcement, calling it "extremely irresponsible" and saying it "groundlessly suspended Chinese airline flights."

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Workers on lifts are pictured near the tail of a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner being built for Xiamen Airlines as a plane lands at Paine Field Airport in Everett, Washington August 7, 2014. Boeing has pushed some factory work on the 787 Dreamliner to the uncovered tarmac outside its assembly plant in Washington state in an effort to keep churning out the popular plane at a rate of one every three days, according to people with knowledge of the situation on August 8, 2014. Picture taken August 7, 2014. REUTERS/Jason Redmond (UNITED STATES - Tags: TRANSPORT BUSINESS) - GM1EA890BNE01

The Xiamen Air flight had stopped to restock when the incident occurred. (Reuters)

The travel-related sparring between Beijing and Washington is not unusual. The move follows the Transportation Department's decision to suspend 44 China-bound flights in January.

China had suspended the same amount of flights – 44 – to the United States that month.

Chinese residents wearing masks outside

People seen wearing face masks outside as smaller Chinese cities begin implementing lockdown measures. Photo taken in Beijing, China, Aug. 3, 2022. (REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo)

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Over 100 weekly flights between the U.S. and China were commonplace before the pandemic. The current number of weekly flights between the two countries hovers around 20.

Reuters contributed to this report.