China warns against joint US, Philippines and Japan drills eroding regional trust

April 20, 2026 3:58 AM EDT

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun attends a press conference in Beijing, China January 7, 2025. REUTERS/Florence Lo

BEIJING, April 20 (Reuters) - China ‌on Monday ​warned ​against military cooperation that could undermine trust and deepen division in the region, as the United States ‌and the Philippines begin annual military exercises with expanded ⁠participation from Japan.

"What the Asia-Pacific region most needs is peace and tranquility, ‌and what it least needs ‌is the introduction of external forces to create division and confrontation," Guo Jiakun, a ministry spokesperson, said at a regular ​press briefing in Beijing when asked about the drills.

Military cooperation between nations should not undermine mutual understanding and trust ⁠among regional countries, disrupt regional peace and stability, be directed against third parties or ​harm their interests, Guo said.

"We would like to remind the relevant countries that persisting in tying themselves ​together on security will only lead ‌to setting themselves on fire and backfiring," he said.

The annual "Balikatan" or "shoulder-to-shoulder" drills from April 20 to ⁠May 8 will see members of Japan's Self-Defense Forces taking part in live-fire drills for the first time.

China's military said last Friday it ⁠deployed naval and air forces to monitor the Japanese destroyer JS Ikazuchi ​that transited the Taiwan Strait. The warship is listed as part of the units participating in the multilateral exercises, according to a statement from ‌Japan's Ministry of Defense.

Asked about Ikazuchi's presence in the strait and Japan's involvement in the military ‌drills, Guo said Tokyo should exercise caution, rather than "flaunting its ⁠military might everywhere and undermining ‌regional stability."

(Reporting by ​Liz Lee and Ethan Wang; Additional reporting by Kaori Kaneko in Tokyo; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Sharon ‌Singleton)



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