Updated 10 January 2026 at 18:09 IST
China, Russia, Iran Start 'Brics Plus' Naval Exercises in South African Waters
China, Russia, and Iran commenced joint naval exercises in South Africa's waters as part of a BRICS Plus operation aimed at maritime safety. The expanded BRICS now includes six additional countries. While the US has criticized these nations, South African officials stated that the exercises do not reflect political hostility.
- World News
- 2 min read

Johannesburg: 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 US and Western economic dominance - to include six other countries.
The Reuters Daily Briefing newsletter provides all the news you need to start your day. Sign up here. It's a shift from Beijing's threat last April that it would further restrict imports of Hollywood films in response to U.S. tariffs.
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.
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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.
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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 US)," Mathebula told Reuters, pointing out that South Africa has also periodically carried out exercises with the U.S. Navy.
Published By : Melvin Narayan
Published On: 10 January 2026 at 18:09 IST