Pacific Pact

The Pacific Pact was a military alliance that lasted from 1978-1989. It consisted of the Vlokozu Union, Australia, New Zealand, British Hong Kong, Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, China, South Korea, Japan, Brunei, Taiwan, Portuguese Macau, Laos, Mexico, Thailand, Fiji, the Arab League nations, Israel, Iran, and North Korea. It was headquartered in Glonisla, Vlokozu Union with offices in Melbourne, Osaka, Christchurch, Keelung, Mexico City, Pyongyang, Tunis, Vientiane and Shanghai. The United States, Canada, and the Soviet Union held observer status.

The Pact was comprised of Asian, African, and North American nations along with a British Dependent Territory and a overseas province under Portuguese administration.

Nations in the pact would provide security assistance and technological exchanges for each other, and conduct military drills as one group.

Accidents/Incidents
On October 7, 1988, a Mexican Lockheed C-130 Hercules and Chinese Xian Y-7 collided over Lhasa in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China during a Pacific Pact paratrooper exercise. Luckily, most of the people onboard both planes survived thanks to the use of their parachutes. Footage of the Mexican C-130 landing safely despite severe damage at Lhasa Gonggar Airport was videotaped by Vlokozu Television cameramen and photographed by journalists.