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As China tension abates, Navy to send fewer warships for US-Japan-India exercise

- More on business-standard.com AJAI SHUKLA

The Indian Navy is sending three surface warships and a surveillan­ce aircraft to the annual US-Japan-India trilateral Exercise Malabar 2018, being held in Guam, in the Pacific Ocean. Last year, amid tensions with China, it had sent thrice that number. “The Navy will be represente­d by two indigenous­ly designed and built ships, the multipurpo­se stealth frigate INS Sahyadri and anti-submarine warfare corvette, INS Kamorta, fleet tanker INS Shakti and a long range maritime patrol aircraft P-8I,” said an official Navy release on Monday.

In Malabar 2017, held in the Bay of Bengal, India had fielded aircraft carrier INS Vikramadit­ya and a Kiloclass submarine, in addition to seven other major warships. Malabar 2018 features no Indian aircraft carrier or submarine, and relatively smaller warships.

Malabar 2017 was held last July while Indian and Chinese troops were locked in a tense border standoff in Doklam, at the India-China-Bhutan border tri-junction near Sikkim. This year’s reduced participat­ion comes just six weeks after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s two-day “informal summit” meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Wuhan, China.

Naval sources dismiss the notion of a “reduced commitment to Malabar”. They said the Navy is not sending an aircraft carrier or submarine simply because Guam is too far away – almost 10,000 kilometres by sea. A senior officer said it would be undesirabl­e to leave no aircraft carrier for India’s defence.

The admirals say this year’s exercise will involve unpreceden­ted complexity, featuring enemy threats in all three dimensions, but especially underwater threats from submarines – a key Chinese strength.

They point out that, for the first time, officers from all three navies will function as “sea riders” – or posted on other navies’ warships. That means Indian Navy officers will obtain the unpreceden­ted benefits of operating on the US Navy Los Angeles-class nuclear attack submarines and the highly regarded Soryu-class submarines of the Japanese Maritime Self Defence Force (JMSDF). Also, for the first time, the world’s best three longrange maritime reconnaiss­ance (LRMR) aircraft – the Indian Navy’s Boeing P-8I, the US Navy’s Boeing P8A and the JMSDF’s Kawasaki P-1 – will operate together.

Beijing regards Exercise Malabar as the military manifestat­ion of a trilateral alignment between Washington, Tokyo and New Delhi, directed at containing China. Beijing has also opposed Australia’s frequent requests to participat­e in Exercise Malabar, regarding that as amounting to a “Quadrilate­ral Alliance” of Asia-Pacific democracie­s. Chinese apprehensi­ons about India joining a US-led, anti-China grouping have been inflamed by growing US-India naval cooperatio­n, and by measures like the recent re-naming of the Hawaii-based United States Pacific Command (USPACOM) as the US Indo-Pacific Command. US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis explained that the renaming only took into account the actual geographic­al spread of USPACOM, “from Bollywood to Hollywood and from penguins to polar bears”. Beijing was not amused.

On Monday, the defence ministry stated that the US Navy will participat­e in Malabar 2018 with six major warships: “Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan with its air wing; two Ticonderog­a class cruisers, USS Antietam and USS Chancellor­sville; two Arleigh Burke class destroyers, USS Benfold and USS Mustin; a Los Angeles-class attack submarine and one long range maritime patrol aircraft P-8A.”

It said the JMSDF would be represente­d by Hyuga class helicopter carrier JS Ise with it integral helicopter­s; Takanami-class destroyer JS Suzunami; Akizuki-class destroyer JS Fuyuzuki, a P-1 LRMR aircraft and a submarine.

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