Japan has warned that it will “decisively protect” its territory in the face of increasing joint patrols by Chinese and Russian warplanes that have sparked severe security concerns, a government official said on Dec. 1.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno said Japan conveyed its concerns to China and Russia via diplomatic channels regarding their warplane activities near Japan’s territory.
The ministry stated that the four aircraft didn’t enter Japan’s airspace, but they posed a military threat. Russian Tu-95 bombers are capable of carrying cruise missiles, although it’s unclear whether they were armed during the mission.
An air defense zone is an area in which countries demand that foreign aircraft take special steps to identify themselves.
The warplanes included two Chinese H-6s, four Russian Tu-95s, and two Russian Su-35s; South Korean officials said they didn’t violate South Korean airspace.
Russia, China Hold Joint Air Patrol
Later that day, Russia’s Defense Ministry announced that its Tu-95 bombers and Chinese H-6K bombers conducted an aerial patrol over the Sea of Japan and the East China Sea, which lasted about eight hours.“Su-30SM and Su-35S jets of the Russian Aerospace Forces provided fighter support for the air task force,” it stated.
“For the first time in the history of aerial patrolling, Russian aircraft landed at an airfield in the People’s Republic of China and Chinese planes landed at an airfield on the territory of the Russian Federation,” the Russian ministry stated.
China stated that its air forces deployed H-6K strategic bombers, YU-20 tanker aircraft, and J-16 fighter jets to the patrol mission.
The two countries have boosted cooperation and signed a “no limits” partnership during the Beijing Winter Olympics in February. China has refrained from condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which Russia described as a “special military operation.”