Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

All preparatio­ns for Malabar drill done: Navy chief

- Rahul Singh rahul.singh@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The Indian Navy will be represente­d by frontline warships of the Eastern Fleet and long range maritime reconnaiss­ance aircraft ADMIRAL SUNIL LANBA, Navy chief

All preparatio­ns for the Malabar exercise have been completed, said Navy chief Admiral Sunil Lanba, as India, the United States and Japan prepare to deploy their frontline military assets off Guam in the Western Pacific from June 6 to June 15 for wide-ranging naval manouevres.

The three countries will deploy a mix of aircraft carriers, submarines, submarine hunter planes and warships for a raft of drills to sharpen interopera­bility among their maritime forces, at a time China is demonstrat­ing new assertiven­ess in the Asia-Pacific.

The manouevres will be carried out in two segments: the harbour phase from June 6 to June 11 followed by the sea phase till June 15. “The Indian Navy will be represente­d by frontline warships of the Eastern Fleet and long range maritime reconnaiss­ance aircraft. Similarly, US and Japan are also expected to commit assets such as aircraft carrier, submarines and modern patrol air- craft,” Lanba said.

He said various focus areas for the annual exercise had been mutually identified and the planning conference­s had been successful­ly concluded.

The at-sea phase is expected to cover areas such as surface warfare, anti-submarine warfare, air defense, search and rescue, gunnery operations and submarine familiaris­ation.

Experts said Malabar is being conducted at a time when the US appears to be realigning its posture in the Asia-Pacific by deploying more warships and aircraft, scaling up infrastruc­ture and re-evaluating the scale and scope of exercises with its allies and partners to counter China and its moves to militarise the region, including the South China Sea.

“Malabar essentiall­y signals closeness of intent between India and the US at the strategic level. But China may interpret it differentl­y and view it as a move against it,” said Vice Admiral Pradeep Chauhan (retd), director, National Maritime Foundation.

Chauhan said build-up of US force levels in the Asia-Pacific would continue as Washington strengthen­s its commitment to the region, amid China’s opaqueness of intent.

The US recently withdrew an invitation to China to participat­e in the RIMPAC (Rim of the Pacific) naval exercises after Beijing deployed surface-to-air missile systems and jammers, and landed bombers at an island in the disputed South China Sea.

“It clearly shows that the US will act if China challenges internatio­nal norms. The larger policy for Asia-Pacific will see the US beefing up its presence in the region,” said an official, who did not wish to be named.

 ?? PTI FILE ?? Ships during the sea phase of trination Malabar exercise in the Bay of Bengal last year.
PTI FILE Ships during the sea phase of trination Malabar exercise in the Bay of Bengal last year.

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