Russia And China Display Strategic Coordination In
Asia-Pacific
Written by M. K. BHADRAKUMAR on 27/07/2019
An exciting new template has appeared in the geopolitics of the
Asia-Pacific last week when Russia’s Aerospace Force and China’s Air Force
carried out their first-ever joint air patrol in the region.
Steadily and imperceptibly but profoundly, the regional alignments are
transforming. Russia and China routinely claim that their entente is neither a
military alliance nor is directed against any third country. Yet, the alchemy
of that relationship is undergoing a huge transformation, stemming out of a
conscious decision by their top leaderships.
Tu-95MS
The so-called joint patrol last Tuesday involved Russia’s Tu-95MS strategic
bombers and the H-6K aircraft on China’s part. The Tupolov Tu-95MS (which NATO
calls the ‘Bear’) is a is a large, four-engine turboprop-powered strategic
bomber and missile platform to carry the new Russian Kh-101/102 stealth cruise
missile, which uses use radio-radar equipment and target-acquiring/navigation
system based on GLONASS. The ‘Bear’ used to be a veritable icon of the Cold War
as it performed a maritime surveillance and targeting mission for other
aircraft, surface ships and submarines and a versatile bomber that would
deliver the thermonuclear bomb.
China’s H-6K is a heavily redesigned version of the ‘Bear’, capable of
carrying air launched cruise missiles. According to the Pentagon, the bomber
gives China a “long-range standoff offensive air capability” with
precision-guided munitions. Russia and China deployed two each of the Tu-95MS
and H-6K strategic bombers in the air patrol on Tuesday.
Chinese Xian
H-6
According to a Russian Defence Ministry statement, the air patrol was
undertaken on the “planned route over the Sea of Japan and the East China
Sea.” The statement added that the joint air patrol was intended to strengthen
Russian-Chinese relations and raise the level of interaction between the armed
forces of both countries, in particular, to expand their capabilities for joint
operations.
Significantly, the Russian statement said that another goal of
the joint patrol is “strengthening global strategic stability.”
The South Korean defence ministry, however, insisted that following the
Russian-Chinese air patrol by the strategic bombers, a Russian A-50 command and
control military aircraft also entered the country’s Air Defence Identification
Zone (ADIZ) twice. South Korea claimed that it deployed fighter jets and fired
360 warning shots ahead of the Russian A-50, which is an unarmed
AWACS plane, designed for tracking and observation.
Russian A-50
aircraft
Why Russia and China jointly undertook an unprecedented joint air patrol
over the disputed islands in the East China Sea (known to the Koreans as Dokdo
and to the Japanese as Takeshima) remains unclear. But, quite obviously, it is
an affront to the US, which has alliance treaties with both Japan and South
Korea. The incident comes barely two months after the release of the
Pentagon’s Indo-Pacific Strategy Report, which spelt out the US’ dual
containment strategy against China (“a Revisionist Power”) and Russia (“a
Revitalised Malign Actor”.)
The Chinese Defense Ministry’s official spokesman Col. Wu Qian said on
Wednesday, “I would like to reiterate that China and Russia are engaged in
all-encompassing strategic coordination. This patrol mission was among the
areas of cooperation and was carried out within the framework of the annual
plan of cooperation between the defence agencies of the two states. It was not
directed against any other “third state.”
“As far as the practice of joint strategic patrols is concerned, both sides
will make a decision on the matter on the basis of bilateral consultations.
Under the strategic command of the heads of states, the armed forces of the two
nations will continue developing their relations. The sides will support each
other, respect mutual interests and develop corresponding mechanisms of
cooperation.”
Clearly, the Chinese statement has been far more assertive than the Russian
statement, describing the joint patrol as part of an “all-encompassing
strategic coordination” between the two countries and may continue in future as
they “support for each other, respect mutual interests and develop
corresponding mechanisms of cooperation.”
Map of the route of Russian-Chinese
joint patrol mission on July 23, 2019
Moscow also says that the first-ever joint patrol of the long-range
aviation in the Pacific was the beginning of a wider program, which aims to
boost the Russian and Chinese militaries’ ability to work together and the
planned program stretches at least for the remainder of the year.
Neither Russia nor China is party to the maritime dispute in the East China
Sea and when the undertook a joint patrol nonetheless, it bore an uncanny
resemblance to the US exercising its ‘freedom of navigation’ in the South China
Sea. The US has a big military presence in the region but was rendered an
ineffectual observer, unable to go the aid of either of its allies — Japan and
South Korea which too could protest and lament from the sidelines.
The symbolism is striking. The US National Security Advisor John Bolton who
was on a visit to Seoul a day after the flyover of the islands by the
Russian and Chinese strategic bombers exhorted South Korea and Japan to work
together amid growing security concerns.
On the other hand, the incident last Tuesday only served to highlight the
conflicting claims over the islands. Eighteen South Korean jets and about 10
from Japan’s Self-Defense Forces were deployed to the area during the incident.
Japan, which considers the South Korean-controlled islands as its
own, maintains that the South should not have responded to the Russian
plane. Meanwhile, a South Korean Defense Ministry spokesperson said Wednesday
that Japan’s views are completely irrelevant.
In fact, one viewpoint is that China and Russia took advantage of this rift
to put their security partnership to the test. The CNN speculated that the
Russian-Chinese mission may have been designed to draw out South Korean and
Japanese aircraft for intelligence gathering purposes.
Either way, Russia and China may have underscored that carrying forward
their convergence on the Asia-Pacific region, their two militaries intend to
undertake active “strategic coordination” in the Far East where the US has
begun deploying advanced missile defence capabilities. For China, the timing is
particularly significant in view of the proposed US arms sales to Taiwan.
For both Russia and China, the Far East will be of increased importance in
the period ahead as forming a gateway to the Northern Sea
Route, the shipping lane which the two countries are jointly
developing to connect the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean along the
Russian coast of Siberia and the Far East.
Source: The Indian Punchline
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