The joint patrol came a day before Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met with his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, for talks on the sidelines of an Association of Southeast Asian Nations
meeting of foreign ministers in Vientiane, Laos.
Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that during their meeting, the Russian and Chinese foreign ministers promoted “practical cooperation” with one another at a time of “a lot of turbulence and uncertainty,” while criticizing “certain countries” for becoming increasingly proactive in setting up “restricted bloc-based military and political mechanisms” in the Asia-Pacific region, possibly referring to NATO’s
strategic pivot to the Indo-Pacific region.
In a 2022 strategic foresight report, NATO said the Indo-Pacific landscape is likely to “convert into a predominant Chinese attempt to federate or potentially constrain split countries through economic, diplomatic, cultural and military levers putting at risk the rule of law, international order, democratic values, maritime freedom, sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
The document called for regional organizations directly or indirectly supported or led by the United States to “stand firm to counter Chinese soft and hard power, shaping multiple scenarios of geopolitical tension(s) and even direct confrontation(s).”
The NATO report also said that “revisionist countries” such as China and Russia seek to expand their regional influence, in part by providing support to low-income countries in the region.
While China and Russia have been conducting joint military training exercises for decades, their cooperation in this regard has intensified in recent years.
Russian airplanes routinely enter Alaska’s ADIZ. Still, NORAD’s interception on July 24 marks the first time that Chinese military aircraft were intercepted in the region, according to Alexander Korolev, an expert on Russian–Chinese military cooperation at the University of New South Wales in Sydney.
The NORAD encounter of the Russian–Chinese joint patrol was “notable for being the first intercept of Chinese military aircraft near Alaska,” Mr. Korolev
told The Financial Times.
A NORAD spokesperson contacted by The Epoch Times declined to confirm that Chinese military aircraft had never before been intercepted in Alaska’s ADIZ, while the Pentagon did not respond to a request for clarification on the matter.
Air Force Gen. Gregory M. Guillot, who was sworn in as the new head of NORAD in February, told
the House Armed Services Committee in March that he believed that Chinese aircraft would soon begin operating near Alaska.
“Fortunately, we haven’t seen Chinese aircraft operate near our air defense identification zones yet, but I think that that’s coming as early as this year,” Mr. Guillot said.
“That shows an overall concern I have about the growing capability of China not only with aircraft but also with ships and even submarines being able to range further from China and closer to our shores.”