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China, Russia, Iran start ‘BRICS Plus’ naval exercises in South African waters

By Thomson Reuters Jan 10, 2026 | 2:37 AM

By Tim Cocks

JOHANNESBURG, Jan 10 (Reuters) – China, Russia and Iran began a week of joint naval exercises in South Africa’s waters on Saturday in what the host country described ‍as a BRICS Plus operation to “ensure the safety of shipping and maritime economic activities”.

BRICS Plus is an expansion of a geopolitical bloc originally comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – and seen by members as a counterweight to U.S. and Western economic dominance – to include six other ‌countries.

Though South Africa routinely carries out naval exercises ‌with China and Russia, it comes at a time of heightened tensions between U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration and several BRICS Plus countries, including China, Iran, South Africa and Brazil.

The expanded BRICS group also includes ​Egypt, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and the United Arab Emirates.

Chinese military officials leading the opening ceremony said Brazil, Egypt and Ethiopia ‍participated as observers.

“Exercise WILL FOR PEACE 2026 ​brings together navies from BRICS Plus countries for … ​joint maritime safety operations (and) interoperability drills,” South Africa’s military said in a ‍statement.

Lieutenant Colonel Mpho Mathebula, acting spokesperson for joint operations, told Reuters all members had been invited.

Trump has accused the BRICS nations of pursuing “anti-American” polities, and last January threatened all members with a 10% trade tariff on top of duties he was already imposing ‍on countries across the world.

The pro-Western Democratic Alliance, the second largest party in South African President Cyril Ramaphosa’s coalition, said the exercises “contradict our ‍stated neutrality” and that ‍BRICS had “rendered South Africa a pawn in the ​power games being waged by rogue states on ​the ⁠international stage”.

Mathebula rejected that criticism.

“This is not a ‌political arrangement … there is no hostility (towards the U.S.),” Mathebula told Reuters, pointing out that South Africa has also periodically carried out exercises with the U.S. Navy.

“It’s a naval exercise. The intention is for us to improve our capabilities and share information,” she said.

(Additional reporting by Sfundo Parakozov. Editing ⁠by Mark Potter)