South Korea Scrambles Fighter Jets as Chinese, Russian Warplanes Enter Air Defence Zone

South Korea Scrambles Fighter Jets as Chinese, Russian Warplanes Enter Air Defence Zone
A South Korean Air Force F-35A fighter jet takes off from the runway during the "Vigilant Storm" U.S.-South Korea joint aerial drill at Gunsan Air Base, South Korea on Oct. 31, 2022. South Korean Defense Ministry via Getty Images
|Updated:
0:00

SEOUL—South Korea’s military said it had scrambled fighter jets when ‍Chinese and Russian military planes ‍entered and left its air defense zone on Tuesday.

Seven Russian planes ‌and two Chinese planes had entered ⁠the Korea Air Defense Identification Zone (KADIZ) at around 10 a.m. (0100 GMT) then left, and there was no breach of its territorial airspace, South ⁠Korea’s ‍Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said.

An earlier report by the Newsis news agency had said 11 planes had entered ‌the air defense zone.

The Russian and ⁠Chinese military aircraft had been identified and South Korean fighter jets were deployed ‌in case of any contingencies, the JCS said.

The aircraft spent about an hour in the ⁠KADIZ off South Korea’s ‌east and south coast, the ‌Yonhap News Agency ​also cited South Korea’s military as saying.

Chinese and Russian military aircraft typically conduct joint exercises around the Korean Peninsula ⁠once or twice a year, Yonhap reported.