Summary

South Korea scrambled fighter jets as five Chinese and six Russian warplanes entered its air defense identification zone (KADIZ) on Friday, though they did not breach national airspace.

The incursion, part of joint Chinese-Russian military drills, occurred near the contested Dokdo islands and lasted over four hours.

South Korea condemned the unannounced flights, calling for measures to prevent escalation.

Similar incidents have increased since 2019, reflecting deepening China-Russia defense ties amid tensions with the U.S., South Korea, and Japan.

This follows other global airspace incidents involving Russian and Chinese forces.

  • @Paragone
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    120 hours ago

    Oversimplification:

    it depends on what that gov’t money’s in, doesn’t it?

    Education, properly-done, pays back many times over.

    Corruption-removal does, too.

    Trustworthy-infrastructure does, too.

    Eradicating economic-waste, through effective regulation, does, too…

    ( ever heard of a sloppy-engineered, sloppy-configured, sloppy-built race-engine winning a NASCAR race?

    No?

    Only the tightest-regulated engines CAN compete at the top?

    It’s the same with rightly regulated economies: efficient, quick, agile, low-waste, instant-accountability, low-corruption, low-lossage, etc.

    IT’S THE SAME PRINCIPLE.

    I cannot understand why sooo many people reject that tightly-regulated race-engines win, & for the same principle/reason … tightly-regulated-in-the-right-way economies win in the world-economy.

    Ideology apparently prevents many from knowing the meaning, that is true, but good grief, it’s obvious-as-hell, once seen, isn’t it?

    The tightest-economy has to be better than the sludge-corruption-and-inertia-economy, right?

    whatever… )

    ( :

    _ /\ _