
30 JUNE 2026
This week’s edition unfolds in a regional environment where strategic activism is becoming more visible and more demanding. South Korea sits at the centre of this shift. Seoul’s readiness to accept North Korean prisoners of war captured in Ukraine, its planned ministerial channel with Kyiv, its mass drone initiative, its AI-chip investment drive and its renewed defence cooperation with Japan all point in the same direction: middle powers are no longer waiting for crises to be managed by larger actors. They are trying to shape the terms of deterrence, diplomacy and industrial resilience themselves.
At the same time, Asia’s security architecture is becoming more crowded and less settled. India’s hosting of the BRICS National Security Advisers’ meeting, and the India–China talks held on its sidelines, show how rivalry can be stabilised without being resolved. BRICS is not becoming a coherent alliance, and it would be misleading to treat it as one. Its members disagree too sharply on borders, sanctions, wars and relations with the West. But the New Delhi meeting still matters because it gives the Global South a more formal security language and gives India room to convene without fully aligning.
This issue also shows military pressure becoming more routine across the western Pacific. Taiwan’s immediate combat-readiness drills, warnings about shrinking attack-warning time, the Fujian’s transit through the Taiwan Strait and the Liaoning’s extended far-sea training all point to the same problem: operational patterns are changing before political thresholds are crossed. This is not yet war preparation in a narrow sense, but it is a steady compression of warning time, decision space and crisis-management margin. The harder risk is that repeated demonstrations become the new normal before regional actors adapt.
Taken together, the developments in this issue point to an Asia where security now runs through prisoners of war, drones, coast guards, carriers, chips, supercomputers, export controls and diplomatic platforms. China is courting Bangladesh, Montenegro, Austria and South Korea while expanding legal and technological pressure. The United States is strengthening Philippine surveillance and Australian air readiness. Australia is formalising Pacific security consultation with Vanuatu. The central question is no longer whether regional actors see the pressure building. They clearly do. The harder question is whether their responses can create real capacity before coercion, dependency and strategic uncertainty set the pace.
- Key Developments
- Statistics of the Week
- Map of the Week
- Photo of the Week
- Infographic of the Week
- Regional Alliances
- Analysis
Seoul Opens Door to North Korean POWs Captured in Ukraine
South Korea said it will accept any North Korean prisoners of war captured by Ukraine while fighting for Russia if they choose to go to the South. Seoul’s foreign ministry also said it opposes sending the prisoners back to Russia or North Korea against their wishes. The statement comes ahead of planned talks between South Korean and Ukrainian ministers in Seoul on June 30, giving the issue a direct diplomatic channel between Kyiv and Seoul.
The significance lies in how North Korea’s role in Russia’s war is now creating a humanitarian and political test for South Korea. This is not only a prisoner-of-war question. Seoul is treating captured North Koreans as individuals with agency, while also reinforcing its long-standing position that North Koreans may be accepted in the South. The harder test is whether Ukraine, South Korea and their partners can manage these cases without turning them into another flashpoint in Russia–North Korea military cooperation.
India–China Normalisation Edges Forward at BRICS Security Meeting
Indian National Security Adviser Ajit Doval met Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in New Delhi on the sidelines of the BRICS National Security Advisers’ meeting, which India is hosting as chair. India’s foreign ministry described the talks as “constructive and forward-looking” and said both sides noted progress toward gradual normalisation of ties. Relations have improved since 2024 after years of friction triggered by the 2020 border clash. Wang said the two sides must respect each other’s core interests, handle sensitive issues properly and resume dialogue mechanisms, while also promoting exchanges in trade, finance, law enforcement and media.
The significance lies in how New Delhi and Beijing are trying to stabilise rivalry without resolving its foundations. This is not a strategic reset: border mistrust, regional competition and India’s tightening partnerships with the United States and other Indo-Pacific actors still constrain the relationship. But the meeting shows both sides want working channels restored before disputes again harden into crisis. The harder test is whether procedural normalisation can produce real restraint along the border and durable economic engagement.
BRICS Security Meeting Puts Global South Risk Agenda in New Delhi
India hosted the BRICS National Security Advisers’ meeting in New Delhi under its 2026 chairship, with National Security Adviser Ajit Doval chairing discussions among senior security representatives from member states. The agenda focused on the changing nature of national security threats, the role of new technologies in emerging risks, counter-terrorism cooperation and security in the use of information and communication technologies. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu and a senior Iranian security official were among the high-level participants.
The significance lies in how BRICS is trying to turn political dissatisfaction with Western-led security management into a more formal cooperation track. This is not a collective-security alliance, and the bloc’s members still diverge sharply on many crises. But the New Delhi meeting shows BRICS moving beyond economic coordination toward security language, institutional working groups and crisis consultation. The harder test is whether this produces usable consensus, or simply gives rival powers another platform to contest Western influence.
U.S. Sea Drones Strengthen Philippine Maritime Surveillance
The United States has given the Philippine military four Ocean Aero Triton autonomous underwater and surface vehicles, worth $13 million, to improve Manila’s ability to monitor its waters and detect maritime threats. The solar-powered systems can operate without crews for up to 30 days and are intended to support surveillance against illegal fishing, gray-zone activity and threats to freedom of navigation. The transfer follows recent U.S.–Philippine maritime drills and comes amid renewed tension around Scarborough Shoal.
The significance lies in how the U.S.–Philippine alliance is moving from symbolic reassurance toward practical maritime-domain awareness. This is not a major combat platform, but it matters because persistent surveillance is central to contesting coercion below the threshold of war. The harder test is whether these systems can be integrated into Philippine command, coast guard and naval operations fast enough to change behaviour at sea, rather than simply documenting Chinese pressure after it happens.
Taiwan Drills Rapid War Transition Under Chinese Pressure
Taiwan’s military will hold a five-day “Immediate Combat Readiness Exercise” from Monday to Friday as part of its shift toward more realistic training for a possible Chinese attack. The defence ministry said the drills will use actual troops, terrain and equipment in real time, with an emphasis on readiness deployment, joint command and control, logistics, battlefield preparation and rapid transition from peacetime to wartime. The announcement came as Taiwan reported 21 Chinese military aircraft near the island, including J-16 fighters, KJ-500 early-warning aircraft and Y-20 refuelling aircraft.
The significance lies in how Taiwan is preparing for the possibility that China could convert routine pressure into sudden escalation. This is not a ceremonial exercise or a standard annual display: it reflects Taipei’s effort to harden command systems and operational readiness before a crisis begins. The harder test is whether Taiwan can turn realistic drills, HIMARS integration and upcoming Han Kuang war games into credible deterrence against a Chinese strategy built on constant air-sea pressure.
Liaoning Drills Extend China’s Far-Sea Carrier Training
China’s aircraft carrier Liaoning and accompanying vessels returned to port after more than 40 days of drills in the South China Sea and western Pacific, according to Chinese state broadcaster CCTV. The training focused on combat readiness, including air defence, anti-ship strikes, support missions, long-range rescue and live-fire exercises. CCTV said the group conducted multiple ship-air offensive and defensive drills, as well as joint exercises with an amphibious assault ship group to improve coordination in far-sea operations. Japan had earlier reported monitoring the Liaoning group east of the Philippines’ Luzon Island in late May.
The significance lies in China’s effort to make carrier operations beyond the first island chain more routine. This is not just a training cruise: the combination of carrier aviation, amphibious coordination and live-fire activity points to a navy rehearsing more complex expeditionary missions. The harder test for Japan, Taiwan and the Philippines is whether these deployments remain periodic signalling, or become a regular operating pattern that stretches allied surveillance and crisis response across the western Pacific.
China–Bangladesh Visit Pushes Strategic Partnership Forward
Bangladesh Prime Minister Tarique Rahman met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing during his first China visit since taking office, after talks with Premier Li Qiang and top legislator Zhao Leji. Beijing said the visit would enhance strategic communication, advance high-quality Belt and Road cooperation, expand exchanges across multiple fields and strengthen coordination in multilateral affairs. Bangladesh and China also signed 13 memoranda of understanding after Rahman’s meeting with Li, covering bilateral cooperation in several areas.
The significance lies in how Beijing is moving quickly to anchor relations with Bangladesh’s new government. This is not a sudden realignment: Bangladesh has long relied on China for trade, infrastructure and development financing, while still balancing ties with India, Japan and Western partners. But the visit gives China an early opportunity to shape Dhaka’s foreign-policy direction through investment, connectivity and diplomatic symbolism. The harder test for Bangladesh is whether deeper cooperation delivers growth without narrowing its strategic room for manoeuvre.
Taiwan Warns China Attack Warning Time Is Shrinking
Taiwan Defence Minister Wellington Koo said the island must verify its ability to respond immediately to war because the warning time for any Chinese attack is shortening. Taiwan is holding five days of “immediate combat readiness” drills focused on rapid transition from peacetime to wartime status, joint readiness and combat deployment. The exercises come as China operates around Taiwan almost daily and after Beijing’s newest aircraft carrier sailed through the Taiwan Strait.
The significance lies in Taiwan’s concern that a routine Chinese exercise could be turned quickly into an actual attack. This is not only about preparing for a declared invasion: Taipei is trying to reduce the gap between political warning, military mobilisation and battlefield response. The harder test is whether Taiwan’s modernisation drive, higher defence spending, HIMARS training and upcoming Han Kuang exercises can create credible readiness before Chinese pressure further compresses decision time.
ASE Expansion Shows AI Pressure Moving into Chip Packaging
Taiwan’s ASE Technology Holding, the world’s largest chip packaging and testing provider, said it is expanding capacity to meet rising AI demand. Chief Operating Officer Tien Wu said the company is adding 15 sites this year, including six greenfield sites for ASE, seven for Siliconware Precision Industries and facilities acquired from Innolux. ASE has budgeted $8.5 billion in capital expenditure for 2026, a figure Wu said could be exceeded, and the expansion is aimed not only at the next two years but at demand through 2029 and beyond.
The significance lies in how AI supply-chain pressure is moving beyond chip fabrication into advanced packaging, testing and geographic capacity. This is not simply a corporate growth story: ASE’s U.S. investments, including two testing factories in California and two more planned, show how AI hardware production is being pulled into geopolitical diversification. The harder test is whether capacity can expand fast enough to prevent packaging from becoming another bottleneck in the AI semiconductor race.
Fujian Transit Raises Carrier Pressure in Taiwan Strait
Taiwan said China’s newest and most advanced aircraft carrier, the Fujian, sailed through the Taiwan Strait, the first reported Chinese carrier transit there since April. Taiwan’s defence ministry said it used joint intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance methods to monitor the passage, while China’s defence ministry did not immediately comment. The transit comes amid near-daily Chinese military activity around Taiwan and new coast guard operations that Taipei says are designed to create an impression of Chinese jurisdiction around the island.
The significance lies in how Beijing is adding carrier signalling to a wider pressure campaign around Taiwan. This is not just another naval passage: the Fujian’s flat deck and electromagnetic catapults make it a more capable platform than China’s older Liaoning and Shandong carriers, allowing heavier and more numerous aircraft operations. The harder test is whether such movements remain episodic demonstrations, or become part of a regular pattern that normalises advanced Chinese carrier presence in one of Asia’s most sensitive waterways.
China’s LineShine Tops Supercomputer Ranking but Leaves AI Question Open
China’s LineShine supercomputer at the National Supercomputing Centre in Shenzhen took first place in the June 2026 TOP500 ranking, overtaking the U.S. El Capitan system at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The result marks China’s first TOP500 submission in three years and is notable because LineShine uses domestically designed chips. Its return to the list comes after years of U.S. export controls targeting China’s access to advanced chips and high-performance computing technology.
The significance lies in how Beijing is using supercomputing performance to signal technological self-reliance. This is not proof that China now leads the AI computing race: Reuters noted that LineShine ranked fourth on a benchmark closer to AI-style workloads, while many U.S. cloud companies do not submit their AI-focused systems to TOP500. The harder test is whether China can turn domestic high-performance computing into competitive AI infrastructure despite continued restrictions on advanced AI chips.
Black-Market Nvidia Prices Expose China’s AI Compute Strain
Nvidia’s banned AI chips have more than doubled in price on China’s black market, according to the Financial Times, which cited multiple Chinese chip traders. Reuters said it could not independently verify the report. The price surge reflects tightening supply after U.S. export controls restricted China’s access to Nvidia’s most advanced AI hardware, even as Chinese companies continue to seek high-end computing power for model training, inference and data-centre expansion.
The significance lies in how export controls are reshaping access rather than eliminating demand. This is not proof that Washington’s strategy has fully blocked China’s AI development; instead, it shows controls creating scarcity, higher costs and illicit procurement incentives. The harder test is whether U.S. enforcement can close smuggling channels without simply pushing Chinese firms toward older chips, cloud workarounds or accelerated domestic alternatives such as Huawei’s Ascend ecosystem.
China–Montenegro Talks Put EU Bridge Role on Display
Chinese Premier Li Qiang met Montenegro’s Prime Minister Milojko Spajić in Dalian, where Spajić was attending the 17th Annual Meeting of the New Champions. Li marked the 20th anniversary of diplomatic relations by calling Montenegro a good friend and partner in Central and Eastern Europe. He said China wants to deepen political trust, support each other’s core interests, expand balanced trade, advance infrastructure construction and broaden cooperation in information and communications, green energy, the digital economy and artificial intelligence.
The significance lies in how Beijing is positioning Montenegro as both a Western Balkan partner and a future EU bridge. This is not a new alliance, and Podgorica’s strategic priority remains EU accession. But China sees value in sustaining influence before Montenegro enters the bloc, especially through investment, infrastructure and technology cooperation. The harder test is whether Montenegro can benefit from Chinese capital without importing the dependency concerns that already surround past infrastructure borrowing.
China–ROK Talks Seek Economic Stabilisation in Dalian
Chinese Premier Li Qiang met Republic of Korea Prime Minister Kim Min-seok in Dalian, where Kim was attending the 17th Annual Meeting of the New Champions. Li called for stronger political trust, respect for each side’s core interests and a steadier China–ROK strategic cooperative partnership. He also urged use of trade-ministerial mechanisms, faster second-phase free trade agreement negotiations and deeper cooperation in semiconductors, artificial intelligence, new energy and biomedicine. Kim said South Korea welcomes Chinese investment and wants stronger industrial and supply-chain cooperation.
The significance lies in how Seoul and Beijing are trying to rebuild economic channels without removing strategic mistrust. This is not a geopolitical reset: South Korea remains tied to U.S.-led security and technology coordination, while China remains central to Korean trade and regional supply chains. The harder test is whether practical cooperation can survive pressure from Taiwan, chips, North Korea and U.S.–China competition.
Australia’s Spy Chief Warns of Degrading Security Environment
Australia’s security environment is deteriorating as the country faces overlapping threats from autocratic regimes, hackers and extremist violence, ASIO Director-General Mike Burgess warned in his annual threat assessment. Although the terrorism threat level remains at “probable,” Burgess said the label no longer captures the full picture because risks are becoming “concurrent, cascading and compounding.” He cited online radicalisation, social-media polarisation, state-sponsored cyber activity, foreign espionage targeting AUKUS information and antisemitic violence, including arson attacks linked by ASIO to Iran.
The significance lies in how Australia’s domestic security agenda is now inseparable from Indo-Pacific and Middle East geopolitics. This is not only a counterterrorism warning: it shows how foreign interference, cyber operations, encrypted platforms and diaspora-targeted violence are converging inside Australia’s security landscape. The harder test is whether Canberra can strengthen intelligence and resilience without overstretching agencies already confronting terrorism, espionage and politically motivated violence at the same time.
China’s Ethnic Unity Law Extends Legal Pressure Overseas
China said it has the right to hold people and groups outside its borders legally accountable under its new ethnic unity law, which takes effect on July 1. The law aims to promote a “shared” national identity among China’s 55 ethnic minority groups and includes a clause covering overseas actions that Beijing says undermine ethnic unity or incite separatism. Vice Justice Minister Hu Weilie defended the provision as lawful, necessary and consistent with international practice.
The significance lies in how Beijing is expanding domestic political control into an extraterritorial legal instrument. This is not only an ethnic-policy measure aimed at Tibetans, Uyghurs or other minority groups inside China. It also raises concern among overseas activists, rights groups and Taiwan that Beijing may use the law to pursue critics abroad under the language of anti-separatism. The harder test is whether foreign governments resist such claims when they collide with asylum protections, free expression and limits on Chinese jurisdiction.
South Korea Turns Drones into a Mass Combat Tool
South Korea will rapidly expand its drone and counter-drone forces to counter North Korea, with plans to train 500,000 “drone warriors” and distribute unmanned systems across frontline units. Defence Minister Ahn Gyu-back said drones should no longer be limited to specialised units but become a standard combat tool, almost like a “second personal weapon.” The ministry said about 60,000 drones will be produced by 2029, including around 11,000 in 2026, for use across the army, navy, air force and marines.
The significance lies in how Seoul is absorbing battlefield lessons from Ukraine and the Middle East while adapting to North Korean drone advances and South Korea’s demographic constraints. This is not simply a procurement programme: it shifts drones from centralised assets to unit-level surveillance and strike tools, while expanding lasers, high-power microwave weapons, expendable drones, AI swarms and loitering munitions. The harder test is whether South Korea can build a domestic drone ecosystem fast enough without relying on Chinese components.
U.S. Fighter Training Sale Sustains Australia’s Air Combat Edge
The U.S. State Department has approved a potential $250 million Foreign Military Sale to Australia covering training and related equipment for F/A-18F Super Hornet and EA-18G Growler aircraft. The package is aimed at sustaining operational readiness for two of Australia’s most important U.S.-origin air platforms: the Super Hornet strike fighter and the Growler electronic-attack aircraft. The approval reinforces a continuing pattern of U.S. support for Australia’s high-end air capabilities as Canberra adapts its force posture to a more contested Indo-Pacific.
The significance lies in how alliance integration is being maintained through training and sustainment, not only new platforms. This is not a headline-grabbing weapons sale, but it matters because electronic warfare, pilot readiness and platform availability are decisive in any regional contingency. The harder test is whether Australia can keep legacy air assets credible while also absorbing newer capabilities, expanding joint operations with the United States and meeting rising demands across the northern approaches and wider Pacific.
China Courts Austria as EU Tensions Deepen
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi met Austrian Foreign Minister Beate Meinl-Reisinger in Beijing as the two countries marked 55 years of diplomatic relations. Wang said China and Europe should be viewed as partners rather than rivals, arguing that China’s development offers Europe opportunities rather than challenges. He praised Austria’s “rational and pragmatic” China policy and said Beijing hopes Vienna will continue to play a constructive role in improving China–EU relations. Meinl-Reisinger reaffirmed Austria’s one-China policy and expressed readiness to expand cooperation in trade, investment and green development.
The significance lies in how Beijing is using individual European capitals to soften pressure from Brussels. This is not a breakthrough in China–EU relations: the bloc remains divided over trade imbalances, market access, rare-earth dependence and China’s position on Russia. But Austria’s cautious approach gives Beijing a useful channel inside Europe. The harder test is whether pragmatic bilateral engagement can ease tensions, or simply expose EU divisions as Brussels tries to build a firmer China policy.
South Korea Launches $576 Billion AI-Chip Investment Drive
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung unveiled a sweeping semiconductor and AI industrial strategy, backed by more than $576 billion in planned investment. Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix and suppliers are expected to invest 800 trillion won to build new chip fabrication sites in the country’s southwest, while local governments will add further funding and another 81 trillion won is planned for a chip-packaging cluster near Seoul. Lee framed the push around semiconductors, physical AI and data centres, saying South Korea must secure core AI elements faster than competitors.
The significance lies in how Seoul is treating AI infrastructure as both an industrial and regional-development race. This is not only an expansion of memory-chip capacity: high-bandwidth memory, DRAM, packaging and data-centre capacity are now strategic assets. The harder test is whether South Korea can overcome electricity, water, land, logistics and skilled-labour constraints fast enough to turn investment promises into durable AI-chip leadership.
South Korea and Japan Revive Defence Cooperation Track
South Korea and Japan reaffirmed their commitment to the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula and agreed to revive joint search-and-rescue drills, marking another step in the recovery of bilateral security ties. Meeting in Seoul, Defence Minister Ahn Gyu-back and Japanese Defence Minister Shinjiro Koizumi pledged to support regional stability both bilaterally and through cooperation with the United States. The two sides also agreed to expand exchanges between South Korea’s Black Eagles and Japan’s Blue Impulse aerobatic teams.
The significance lies in how Seoul and Tokyo are trying to institutionalise security cooperation despite unresolved historical and territorial disputes. This is not a full strategic reconciliation: wartime history, forced-labour grievances and the Dokdo/Takeshima dispute still limit public trust. But North Korea’s nuclear programme, Russia–North Korea military cooperation and China’s regional pressure are pushing both countries toward practical defence coordination. The harder test is whether joint drills and U.S.-backed trilateral habits can survive the next political flare-up.
Australia–Vanuatu Deal Locks in Pacific Security Consultation
Australia and Vanuatu signed the delayed Nakamal Agreement, a development and security pact aimed at deepening bilateral ties while protecting Vanuatu’s sovereignty. The agreement commits Australia to AU$500 million over 10 years and designates Canberra as Vanuatu’s preferred security and policing partner. It also requires Vanuatu to consult Australia on third-party investment in critical infrastructure and includes a pledge to prevent foreign military bases or the militarisation of Vanuatu’s infrastructure.
The significance lies in how Australia is trying to turn Pacific partnership into a formal barrier against strategic intrusion. This is not a simple anti-China pact: Vanuatu still has major Chinese lending exposure and is pursuing a separate economic agreement with Beijing. But the consultation clause gives Canberra an early-warning role over sensitive infrastructure. The harder test is whether Australia can provide development value without making Vanuatu’s sovereignty look conditional on alignment with Canberra.
U.S. Expands Chinese Tech Import Ban
The U.S. Federal Communications Commission said it will ban imports of additional Chinese-made technology equipment, expanding restrictions first imposed in 2022. The new order covers older models, not only post-2022 designs, from Huawei, ZTE, Hytera, Hikvision and Dahua when used for public safety, government facilities, critical-infrastructure surveillance and other national-security purposes. The ban is expected to take effect in early July, while Americans will be allowed to keep using equipment they already own.
The significance lies in how Washington is turning technology security policy into a broader import-control regime. This is not only about telecom networks: surveillance cameras, routers, drones and other connected devices are increasingly treated as national-security infrastructure. The harder test is whether the U.S. can reduce exposure to Chinese hardware without creating enforcement gaps, higher replacement costs or supply-chain disruption across public agencies and private critical-infrastructure operators.
Japan–India Summit Puts Indo-Pacific Partnership Back on the Calendar
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi will visit India from July 1 to 3 for the annual bilateral summit with Prime Minister Narendra Modi. India’s foreign ministry said the visit will provide an opportunity to review the Special Strategic and Global Partnership and discuss cooperation across trade, investment, defence, security, technology and people-to-people ties. The summit comes as both governments seek to deepen coordination in the Indo-Pacific while managing regional uncertainty around China, supply chains and economic security.
The significance lies in how Japan and India are trying to convert strategic convergence into practical capacity. This is not a formal alliance, and both sides still differ in their threat perceptions and external alignments. But the summit gives Tokyo and New Delhi a platform to advance defence cooperation, infrastructure connectivity, critical minerals and resilient supply chains. The harder test is whether political alignment can produce faster implementation before regional pressure outpaces institutional delivery.
Austria–China Ties at 55
This week’s statistic frames Austria–China relations as a case of pragmatic bilateralism under European discipline. Fifty-five years after diplomatic relations were established, the relationship is no longer only ceremonial. It now sits at the intersection of Austria’s active neutrality, the EU’s de-risking agenda and Beijing’s effort to maintain direct channels with individual European capitals. Vienna’s position is deliberately balanced: it supports Brussels’ push to reduce strategic dependencies on China, but avoids a decoupling logic that would damage trade, climate cooperation, technology supply chains and industrial links.
The sharper story is asymmetry with leverage. Austria faces the same structural trade imbalance shaping wider EU–China tensions, but its specialised niches in machinery, environmental technologies, alpine know-how, cultural exchange and research networks give the relationship depth beyond raw trade flows. Austria’s election to the 2027–28 UN Security Council adds another layer: communication with China, a veto-wielding permanent member, becomes more strategically useful. The harder test is whether Vienna can turn soft power and high-value industry into diplomatic room for manoeuvre without becoming a weak link in Europe’s de-risking consensus.

DF-17 Range Extends China’s Island-Chain Pressure
This week’s map shows the reported maximum 2,500 km range of China’s DF-17 medium-range ballistic missile when equipped with the DF-ZF hypersonic glide vehicle. The range envelope places Taiwan, South Korea, much of Japan, the Philippines and Palau within reach from China’s eastern theatre, while pushing the threat zone toward the Second Island Chain. Guam appears just beyond the shaded range, but the map’s message is clear: the DF-17 is designed to compress the operating space of U.S. and allied forces across the western Pacific.
The significance lies in how range and maneuverability combine to strengthen China’s anti-access strategy. This is not simply another ballistic missile arc. A hypersonic glide vehicle can fly a less predictable trajectory, complicating tracking, warning and interception. In a Taiwan or South China Sea crisis, such systems could threaten air bases, ports, command nodes and missile-defence assets before reinforcements arrive. The harder test for the U.S., Japan, South Korea, the Philippines and Australia is whether dispersed basing, hardened infrastructure and integrated air and missile defence can keep pace with China’s expanding strike architecture.

BRICS Security Track Moves to New Delhi
This week’s photo captures the BRICS National Security Advisers’ meeting in New Delhi, where India hosted senior security officials under its 2026 BRICS chairship. The backdrop slogan — “Building for Resilience, Innovation, Cooperation and Sustainability” — reflects New Delhi’s attempt to frame BRICS security cooperation around both traditional and non-traditional threats. Discussions centred on terrorism, cybercrime, emerging technologies, information security and wider global instability, giving the expanded BRICS format a more explicit security agenda.
The significance lies in how BRICS is trying to move beyond economic coordination into strategic consultation. This is not a military alliance, and its members remain divided on major crises, including China–India rivalry, Russia’s global role and Middle East security. But the image matters because it shows rival and partner states standing inside the same security platform at a moment of fragmented global governance. The harder test is whether BRICS can turn photo-line unity into operational cooperation, or whether internal contradictions will keep it as a forum for signalling rather than problem-solving.

China Courts Austria Inside Europe’s De-Risking Debate
This week’s infographic captures the diplomatic messaging behind Wang Yi’s meeting with Austrian Foreign Minister Beate Meinl-Reisinger in Beijing. Wang’s central line — that China and Europe are “partners, not rivals” — was more than ceremonial language marking bilateral ties. It was a strategic reassurance message aimed at European capitals that remain cautious about a harder EU line on China. By highlighting Austria as a pragmatic interlocutor, Beijing sought to keep open channels with member states that still value trade, investment and climate cooperation.
The significance lies in Austria’s careful balancing act. Meinl-Reisinger framed engagement with China through a European lens: maintaining stable trade while reducing dependencies and defending fair, rules-based conditions. This is not a rejection of the EU’s de-risking agenda, but a softer version of it. The harder test is whether Austria can preserve useful bilateral diplomacy without weakening Europe’s collective leverage on market access, supply chains and China’s wider strategic posture.
🇨🇳🤝🇦🇹 China–Austria talks mark 55 years of ties, but spotlight Europe’s balancing act on Beijing. Vienna backs trade & cooperation while stressing reduced dependencies and rules-based engagement. Beijing calls Europe a “partner.” #ChinaEU #Geopolitics #Diplomacy pic.twitter.com/XLrmvK7FRt
— European Hub for Contemporary China (@EuroHub4Sino) June 26, 2026
BRICS Pushes Security Cooperation Into the Foreground
Introduction
India’s chairship of BRICS in 2026 is giving the grouping a more visible security dimension. The BRICS National Security Advisers’ Meeting in New Delhi brought together senior security officials to discuss the changing nature of threats, the role of emerging technologies, counter-terrorism cooperation and the security use of information and communication technologies. For New Delhi, the meeting was more than a routine diplomatic event. It allowed India to present BRICS as a platform for practical security consultation among major Global South actors at a time of deep geopolitical fragmentation.
This matters because BRICS is increasingly trying to move beyond its original economic identity. The expanded grouping now brings together states with very different alignments, threat perceptions and crisis priorities. China used the meeting to frame BRICS as a vehicle for multipolarity and more equitable global governance, while India used its role as chair to emphasise resilience, innovation, cooperation and sustainability. The result is a security conversation that is not alliance-based in the Western sense, but still seeks to create habits of consultation outside U.S.- and Europe-centred institutions.
India’s Convening Role
The New Delhi meeting highlighted India’s attempt to occupy a central position between competing strategic worlds. India remains deeply engaged with the United States, Japan, Australia and Europe, but it also continues to use BRICS to maintain channels with China, Russia, Iran, the UAE and other non-Western powers. Hosting the security advisers’ track gives New Delhi a way to demonstrate strategic autonomy while shaping the agenda around issues where it wants broader consensus, especially terrorism, cyber threats and technology-enabled insecurity.
The most important side development was the meeting between National Security Adviser Ajit Doval and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi. Both sides noted progress toward gradual normalisation of ties and described the talks as constructive. This does not mean the India–China rivalry is resolved. The border dispute, strategic mistrust and regional competition remain central constraints. But the BRICS setting gave both capitals a controlled diplomatic space to keep dialogue alive without presenting it as a bilateral concession.
A Security Bloc, or a Signalling Platform?
BRICS’ challenge is that its security ambitions run ahead of its internal cohesion. The grouping includes partners that disagree sharply on borders, sanctions, wars, energy security and relations with the West. Its members can agree on broad language about sovereignty, development, terrorism and multipolarity, but turning that into operational cooperation is harder. Counter-terrorism working groups, cyber consultations and technology-security discussions can create continuity, yet they do not automatically overcome strategic contradictions among members.
Still, the New Delhi meeting shows why BRICS cannot be treated as only an economic forum. Its security track is becoming a space where Global South powers contest Western dominance in crisis management, discuss alternative norms and test limited cooperation on shared threats. The harder question is whether BRICS can produce usable mechanisms, or whether its security agenda will remain mostly declaratory.
Conclusion
The regional alliance picture emerging from the BRICS NSA meeting is one of flexible alignment rather than formal bloc politics. India is using BRICS to convene diverse powers without abandoning its other partnerships. China is using BRICS to advance a multipolar narrative. Russia and Iran gain a platform outside Western pressure. The value of the forum lies in this ambiguity. BRICS is not becoming a military alliance, but it is becoming a more important arena for security diplomacy. Its next test is whether consultation can translate into coordination when crises divide the very members it brings together.
South Korea Turns Activism Into Strategy
Introduction
South Korea’s recent moves show a government trying to act on several strategic fronts at once: humanitarian diplomacy, military adaptation, industrial policy and regional alignment. None of these initiatives stands alone. Together, they point to a broader effort by Seoul to respond to North Korea’s expanding external role, the changing character of warfare and the intensifying technology race in Asia.
Ukraine, North Korea and Seoul’s Diplomatic Opening
South Korea’s decision to accept North Korean prisoners of war captured in Ukraine if they choose to go to the South is a small but politically meaningful step. It places Seoul directly inside the Russia–North Korea–Ukraine triangle, while framing the issue around individual choice and opposition to forced repatriation. This is not only a humanitarian gesture. It also allows South Korea to reinforce its claim to represent North Koreans while highlighting Pyongyang’s willingness to send its soldiers into Russia’s war.
The timing matters. Planned South Korea–Ukraine ministerial talks give Seoul a diplomatic channel to manage the issue without turning it into pure symbolism. The harder test is whether South Korea can support Ukraine and expose North Korean involvement without triggering escalation from Pyongyang or complicating its own security priorities on the peninsula.
Drones and the New Battlefield
Seoul’s drone expansion is the clearest sign that South Korea is internalising battlefield lessons from Ukraine and the Middle East. The plan to train 500,000 drone operators and distribute unmanned systems across frontline units marks a shift from specialised drone use to mass tactical integration. Drones are being treated as a basic combat tool, not a niche capability.
This matters because South Korea faces both a North Korean drone threat and long-term demographic pressure on its armed forces. By planning tens of thousands of domestically produced drones, expanding counter-drone systems, and developing AI swarms and loitering munitions, Seoul is trying to compensate for manpower constraints while reducing dependence on Chinese components. The harder challenge will be turning procurement plans into usable battlefield networks, where drones, sensors, electronic warfare and command systems operate together rather than as separate projects.
AI Chips as National Security Infrastructure
President Lee Jae Myung’s AI-chip investment drive adds an industrial layer to this security posture. The planned investment, led by Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, suppliers and local governments, is not just about preserving South Korea’s semiconductor lead. It is also about positioning the country for the next phase of AI competition, where memory chips, advanced packaging, data centres and energy supply become strategic assets.
The domestic geography of the plan is important. By pushing major chip investment into the southwest and developing a packaging cluster near Seoul, the government is linking technology strategy with regional development. That ambition brings risks: electricity, water, skilled labour and infrastructure constraints could slow implementation. But the political message is clear. Seoul sees AI and semiconductors as foundations of national power, not simply export industries.
Japan and the Regional Security Frame
South Korea’s defence diplomacy with Japan shows another layer of activism. The agreement to revive joint search-and-rescue drills and reaffirm denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula reflects a pragmatic effort to stabilise security ties despite unresolved historical disputes. Cooperation with Japan remains politically sensitive in South Korea, but North Korea’s nuclear programme, its military cooperation with Russia and China’s regional pressure are pushing Seoul and Tokyo toward practical coordination.
The U.S. role remains central. Seoul and Tokyo are not building a separate alliance, but they are strengthening bilateral habits that support trilateral coordination with Washington. The harder test is durability. Defence exchanges can advance quickly, but historical grievances and territorial disputes can still disrupt momentum.
Conclusion
South Korea’s current activism is best understood as a multi-domain strategy. Seoul is using diplomacy to respond to North Korea’s role in Ukraine, military reform to adapt to drone warfare, industrial policy to secure AI-era competitiveness, and defence engagement with Japan to strengthen regional deterrence. The opportunity is clear: South Korea can become a more consequential Indo-Pacific actor. The risk is that ambition may outrun implementation. Its next challenge is to connect these initiatives into a coherent strategy before regional pressures intensify further.
