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11 Jan, 2026 15:21

BRICS drills ‘essential’ amid maritime tensions – South Africa

The ‘Will for Peace 2026’ naval exercises started off the coast of Cape Town on Saturday
BRICS drills ‘essential’ amid maritime tensions – South Africa

South Africa considers joint drills with its BRICS allies – Russia, China and Iran – an absolute necessity given the current tensions on high seas, a top commander has said.

The ‘Will for Peace 2026’ exercises started off the coast of Cape Town on Saturday, just days after US forces seized a Russian-flagged oil tanker over claims it had breached Washington’s sanctions against Venezuela.

The US has also recently captured five other tankers in the Caribbean as part of its naval blockade of the Latin American nation.

South Africa’s Deputy Defense Minister Bantu Holomisa said on Friday that the drills were not a response to the latest moves by the US, pointing out that they had been planned months ago.

“Let us not press panic buttons because the US has got a problem with countries. Those are not our enemies,” he said.
The focus should be “on cooperating with the BRICS countries and making sure that our seas, especially the Indian Ocean and Atlantic, they are safe,” Holomisa insisted.

According to media reports, South Africa, China and Iran have deployed destroyers for ‘Will for Peace 2026’ drills, with Russia and the United Arab Emirates being represented by corvettes. Other BRICS nations – Brazil, Indonesia and Ethiopia – have sent their observers to the exercises, which are scheduled to conclude on January 16.

The third iteration of the Mosi (Smoke) naval drills between China, Russia and South Africa had initially been slated to take place near Cape Town in November. However, the exercises were postponed due to the G20 summit hosted by South Africa the same month. A decision was later made to reschedule them, give them a new name and expand the number of participating nations.

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