
Contemporary China-Russia-DPRK alignments and methodological approaches
China and Russia have stepped up joint air and naval patrols across the Indo-Pacific, signaling growing operational coordination that complicates U.S. and allied force planning. North Korean troops are fighting alongside the Russians in its war in Ukraine, while Beijing and Pyongyang have deepened defense exchanges, raising the specter of a more integrated adversarial bloc. On the U.S. side, the 2023 Camp David summit produced new trilateral defense mechanisms with Japan and South Korea, from integrated missile defense to coordinated military exercises. These parallel dynamics raise pressing policy questions about alliance management, escalation risks, and the long-term durability of emerging alignments.
As part of a series of five working group meetings with scholars and practitioners, this project examines the dynamics of great-power alignment in military affairs through theoretical, historical, methodological, and policy lenses. The briefs below are scholarly perspectives on Contemporary China-Russia-DPRK alignment and methodological approaches to study them.

China and Russia’s Alignment with North Korea: Tactical or Strategic?
Hyun-Binn Cho
North Korea’s Alignment with China and Russia: A Long-Run View
Stephan Haggard


The Known Knowns of Coalition-Building
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Marina E. Henke
Russia’s Realignment with China:
Not Always Together, But Never That Far Apart
Kathryn Stoner

