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Kremlin says Russia-China naval drills are not a threat to other nations

By Thomson Reuters Jul 6, 2026 | 7:20 AM

MOSCOW, July 6 (Reuters) – The Kremlin said that joint naval drills between Russia and China which kicked off ​on Monday in the waters and ‌airspace off the Chinese city of Qingdao were not directed against any other country and would boost regional security.

The annual drills are due ‌to ​run from July 6 ⁠to 13 and Russia ⁠has sent a cruiser, a corvette, a diesel-electric submarine and a rescue vessel from its Pacific Fleet to take ​part, Russia’s state RIA news agency reported.

Russia’s Rear Admiral Sergei Sinko said at ⁠the drill’s opening ceremony ⁠on Monday that the exercises ​would take naval cooperation between Moscow and ​Beijing to a new level, while stressing ‌that the exercises were defensive in nature.

Asked if the exercises might provoke a negative reaction from governments in the Asia-Pacific ⁠region, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said:

“As for our joint exercises, they are not directed against ⁠anyone, nor ‌against any single state in ⁠the region. Everyone should bear ​this ‌in mind.

“On the contrary, cooperation ​between Russia ⁠and China in such an important and critical area is a very significant factor that contributes to predictability and security in the region.”

(Reporting by Dmitry Antonov Editing by ​Andrew Osborn)