Chinese, Russian military jets enter South Korea's KADIZ in 11th joint patrol
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Nearly 10 Chinese and Russian military aircraft briefly entered and exited South Korea's Air Defence Identification Zone (KADIZ) over the country's eastern and southern waters on Saturday, 27 June, the South Korean military confirmed. The incursion, which included bombers and fighter jets, did not breach South Korea's actual territorial airspace, according to the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS).
What Happened
The Chinese and Russian aircraft entered the KADIZ in succession before withdrawing from the zone, the JCS said. South Korea's military detected the aircraft prior to their entry and scrambled Air Force fighter jets as a precautionary measure against any possible contingencies.
A JCS official indicated the brief entry appeared to have taken place in the course of joint air drills between China and Russia. Beijing's defence ministry subsequently confirmed that Chinese and Russian forces had conducted their 11th joint strategic aerial patrol, stating it was intended to demonstrate their resolve to safeguard regional peace and stability.
China and Russia's Position
Russia has consistently denied recognising the KADIZ, arguing it has no basis in international law. China and South Korea also maintain overlapping air defence zones over Ieodo, a submerged rock located south of Jeju Island, making that area a recurring flashpoint between Seoul and Beijing.
It is important to note that an Air Defence Identification Zone is not territorial airspace — it is a self-declared buffer that requires foreign aircraft to identify themselves in order to prevent accidental clashes. Entry into a KADIZ does not, by itself, constitute a violation of sovereignty.
South Korea's Response
Lee Kwang-suk, director general of the South Korean defence ministry's international policy bureau, lodged a 'stern' protest over the aircraft's entry into the zone. The ministry reiterated its standing position from December last year: 'Our military will actively respond to aircraft activities from neighbouring countries in the KADIZ in compliance with international law.'
A Pattern of Provocations
This is not an isolated incident. In December last year, two Chinese military planes and seven Russian aircraft briefly entered and exited the KADIZ, prompting a similar scramble of South Korean Air Force jets. Notably, since 2019, the two countries have dispatched military aircraft into the KADIZ once or twice annually during joint exercises — consistently without prior notice to Seoul. Saturday's event marks the 11th such joint strategic aerial patrol, reflecting an increasingly regularised pattern of Sino-Russian military coordination along South Korea's periphery.
Strategic Context
The joint patrols come amid deepening military ties between Moscow and Beijing, which have expanded cooperation across land, sea, and air domains in recent years. For South Korea — a key US ally hosting American troops — the repeated KADIZ entries by two major neighbouring powers carry significant strategic weight, even when they stop short of formal airspace violations. Analysts argue the drills serve as a signal to both Seoul and Washington.