Details about the exercise emerged during a monthly Chinese Ministry of Defense press conference. People’s Liberation Army Senior Colonel Yang Yujun, a spokesperson for the ministry, noted that “purpose of the exercise is to consolidate and develop the China-Russia all-round strategic coordination partnership, to deepen the pragmatic and friendly cooperation between the Chinese and Russian militaries, and to enhance the organization and command capabilities and the levels of the two militaries in jointly conducting the joint traffic defense activities and joint landing activities, so as to further enhance their capabilities of jointly coping with maritime security threats.”
He added that the exercise will include “joint air-defense, joint anti-submarine warfare, joint anti-surface warfare and joint defense.” According to Yang’s comments, the two navies will also conduct joint landing exercises. China will be sending seven People’s Liberation Army Navy ships, “including destroyers, frigates, landing ships and comprehensive replenish vessels,” and, additionally, it will send five aircraft, including airborne early-warning and control aircraft and fighters. The Russians will send a similar assortment of assets to the exercise, including dispatch ships, submarines, and fixed-wing aircraft.
In Tokyo and in Washington, this exercise will be read as another sign of the extent to which China and Russia are aligned in Asia. Relations between Russia and China have waxed and waned over the years, reaching their nadir during the Sino-Soviet split at the height of the Cold War, and, while their interests may not perfectly align on all issues, they cooperate closely as security partners. Notably, Russia’s military cooperation with Beijing has seen a sharp uptick following a general deterioration of its ties with Europe and the United States for its actions in Ukraine, including support for anti-government rebels and the annexation of the Crimean peninsula.
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