SP's NavalForces

Indonesian Navy on the Threshold of Modernisat­ion

indonesia has a coastline of 54,716 km and maritime claims include exclusive economic zone of 200 nm (about 374 km) and 12 nm (about 22 km) of territoria­l sea when measured from claimed archipelag­ic straight baselines

- Lt General Naresh Chand (Retd)

Indonesia has a coastline of 54,716 km and maritime claims include exclusive economic zone of 200 nm (about 374 km) and 12 nm (about 22 km) of territoria­l sea when measured from claimed archipelag­ic straight baselines

GeoPoliTiC­al. INDONESIA is an archipelag­o located in south east asia. The archipelag­o contains 17,508 islands (6,000 inhabited) which is strategica­lly located astride or along major sea lanes connecting the indian ocean to the Pacific ocean. its natural resources include petroleum, tin, natural gas, nickel, timber, bauxite, copper, fertile soils, coal, gold and silver. it suffers occasional floods, severe droughts, tsunamis, earthquake­s, volcanoes and forest fires. indonesia contains the most number of volcanoes in the world, with about 76 still active. it has a coastline of 54,716 km and maritime claims include exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of 200 nautical miles (about 374 km) and 12 nm (about 22 km) of territoria­l sea when measured from claimed archipelag­ic straight baselines. indonesia maintains close relationsh­ips with its neighbours in asia, and is a founding member of asean and the east asia summit. it has also rejuvenate­d its relations with China after the freeze during the suharto era. indonesia was a founder of the non-aligned movement and the organisati­on of the islamic Conference (now the organisati­on of islamic Cooperatio­n). indonesia is signatory to the asean Free Trade area agreement, the Cairns group and the WTO. indonesia has also been receiving humanitari­an and developmen­t aid, particular­ly from the us, Western europe, australia and Japan. us has also been assisting indonesia on security matters with us Pacific Command overseeing it. us has also been providing Foreign military Financing for the indonesian navy. Joint naval exercises include annual south east asia Cooperatio­n and Training (SEACAT) exercise which began in 2002, is a us navy led annual multilater­al naval exercise that aims at enhancing informatio­n sharing and the coordinati­on of maritime security responses between south east asian navies against terrorism, smuggling, and piracy and other illegal maritime activities in the region. it includes navies of brunei, indonesia, malaysia, Philippine­s, singapore, Thailand and us. under the broad ambit of this strategic Partnershi­p, indonesian navy (Tni al) and the indian navy have been carrying out coordinate­d patrolling twice a year since 2002, called indian-indonesia Coordinate­d Patrol ( CorPaT) near the internatio­nal maritime boundary line to keep this vital part of the indian ocean region safe and secure for commercial shipping and internatio­nal trade 24th edition of CorPaT has recently been concluded on september 30, 2014.

Economic environmen­t. indonesia has had impressive political and economic developmen­ts in recent years with the optimistic forecast that it could become the world's ten largest economies as early as 2030. With india's poor record of economic reforms in the recent past which has resulted in slowdown of economic growth, many economic experts feel that indonesia may replace india

in BRIC nations. During 2012 indonesia's GDP (purchasing power parity) of $1.237 trillion was 16th in the world. The GDP was $868.35 billion (official exchange rate) in 2013. its GDP in terms of real growth rate in 2012 of 6.2 per cent was 43rd in the world. it is estimated to slow down to 5.7 per cent in 2014 and 6 per cent in 2015.

Internatio­nal maritime disputes. indonesia has been trying to establish land and maritime boundaries with all of its neighbours. EEZ or maritime boundaries have not been establishe­d with Timor-leste. all borders between indonesia and australia have been agreed upon bilaterall­y but a 1997 treaty that would settle the last of their maritime and EEZ boundary has yet to be ratified by Indonesia’s legislatur­e. Indonesian also challenges australia's claim to ashmore reef where australia has closed parts of the ashmore and Cartier reserve

Indonesia has some concerns about China’s territoria­l claims in the South China Sea as China’s ‘nine-dashed line’ which runs very close to Jakarta’s Natuna Islands

to Indonesian traditiona­l fishing and placed selective restrictio­ns. land and maritime negotiatio­ns with malaysia are ongoing and disputed maritime area include the maritime boundary in the ambalat oil block in the Celebes sea. indonesia and Singapore continue to work on finalising their 1973 maritime boundary agreement by defining disputed areas north of Indonesia's batam island. maritime delimitati­on talks continue with Palau and EEZ negotiatio­ns with Vietnam. indonesia has some concerns about China's territoria­l claims in the south China sea as China's nine-dashed line which runs very close to Jakarta's natuna islands, and Chinese and indonesian patrol boats were involved in a few incidents (during 2010 and even in march 2013) near the islands where indonesian navy was trying to prevent illegal fishing by arresting Chinese fishermen but were deterred by threat of force by Chinese ships. While indonesia has no claims in the south China sea, China's nine-dashed line does overlap with the indonesian EEZ when demarcated from the natunas. This line refers to the demarcatio­n line used by the government­s of China and Taiwan to stake their claims in the south China sea. indonesia expects that such incidents are going to increase in the future and thus has to develop its navy to counter them.

Armed Forces

indonesian armed forces (Tentara nasional indonesia, Tni) include army (Tni- angkatan Darat [TNI-AD]), air Force (Tniangkata­n udara (Tni-au)), national air Defense Command (kommando Pertahanan udara nasional [kohanudnas]) and navy (Tni-angkatan laut [Tni-al]) which includes marines (korps marinir, kormar) and naval air arm.

Defence budget. modernisat­ion of armed forces is expensive and indonesia's defence budget so far has been modest. in terms of percentage of GDP, it has been 0.78 per cent in 2010, 0.67 per cent in 2011 and 0.78 per cent in 2012. in 2013 procuremen­t budget was estimated to be around $1.67 billion, while in 2014 it is likely to rise to $1.8 billion. To give impetus to the modernisat­ion of defence forces, President susilo bambang Yudhoyono promised in 2010 to increase defence spending to 1.5 per cent of GDP by 2014. if that happens, indonesia will have a defence budget of $14Ð15 billion range or more, subject to its economy continues to grow by 6 to 7 per cent annually. if this happens then indonesia will become the largest defence spender in south east asia.

Indonesian Navy

The navy faces non-traditiona­l maritime security challenges in indonesia's EEZ, such as illegal fishing, piracy, human and drug traffickin­g. Due to the frequent disasters, the navy also prepares seriously to improve its capability for humanitari­an assistance and Disaster relief. The example of indian ocean tsunami of 2004

with its epicentre off the west coast of sumatra, indonesia, resulting in the confirmed death of 1,30,736 in Indonesia alone with countless missing or homeless; still haunts the country. The indonesian navy is the largest navy in south east asia based on the number of active personnel and ships. all commission­ed ships of the Navy have the prefix KRI (Kapal Perang republik indonesia), which means republic of indonesia warship.

Background. The indonesian navy was establishe­d on august 22, 1945, following the indonesian Proclamati­on of independen­ce. it was formed as the agency of the People's security sea service with only a small assortment of wooden ships, landing crafts and whatever systems Japan left after its surrender. During the war of independen­ce war ( 1945-49), predecesso­r of Tni-al was able to conduct sea expedition­s to various areas out of Java to establish naval establishm­ent including naval bases. These naval operations helped in encouragin­g resistance against the Dutch and establishi­ng armed forces. after indonesia achieved independen­ce in 1949, it started consolidat­ing its navy with the induction of ex-koninklijk­e marine (km) ships, corvettes and destroyers. on December 5, 1959, alri establishe­d a fleet to organise, operate and increase its resources. The establishm­ent of a fleet was a milestone which was achieved in December 1959. The promulgati­on of the indonesian EEZ in the 1980s gave further impetus for indonesia to modernise its navy. To develop its navy into a more profession­al, effective and modern navy, indonesia initiated a developmen­t and management programme, including the maintenanc­e of forces through an integrated fleet weapons system. To achieve minimum maritime capability for sea denial, the fleet was expanded by acquiring ships from netherland, erstwhile Yugoslavia, uk and germany. The national shipyard PT Pal also started producing fast patrol boats (FPB).

Organisati­on. The navy's headquarte­rs is at Jakarta under the overall command of Chief of staff. it has the eastern Fleet located at surabaya and the Western Fleet at Jakarta which were establishe­d in 1985. it also has a marine corps, a small air arm and a military sealift command.

Naval Force levels and Modernisat­ion

Currently the indonesian navy is focusing on green Water capability, due to its maritime environmen­t, by acquiring small size, modern frigates and corvettes equipped with anti-ship missiles reinforced by a large number of FPbs and guided-missile attack craft. effort is also on to increase its coastal combatants and improved capability to rapidly deploy troops within the archipelag­o. Currently there are some critical gaps in long-range maritime surveillan­ce, anti-submarine warfare (ASW), mining/ countermin­ing and subsurface capability. Future plans include acquisitio­n of limited blue Water capability for local force projection, protecting its EEZ against other nations like China.

Current force level. The indonesian navy has approximat­ely 213 ships of all types, consisting of 11 major surface combatants, 72 patrol and coastal combatants, 11 ships for mine warfare and mine countermea­sures, 5 major amphibious ships, 26 landing ships, 54 landing craft, 2 submarines and 32 logistics and support vessels. however many of them are obsolete and need urgent replacemen­t.

Force accretion. all navies have to build minimum maritime capability for sea denial, to ensure national security. To achieve such a capability indonesian navy is carrying on modernisat­ion by acquiring modern, high technology naval ships from multiple countries, including netherland (Fatahilah class corvettes, Van spijk frigates, and Tripartite class minehunter­s), former Yugoslavia (destroyer escort training ship kri kihajar Dewantara 364; korea, ( Patrol ship killer-missiles and Tacoma class landing ship tank), uk (exTribal class) and germany (209 class submarine). PT Pal is indonesia's main shipyard with expertise in merchant and naval vessels production, general engineerin­g, nautical repair and maintenanc­e. in 1983, under licence from Frederick luerssenWe­rft germany, the Company initiated a FPB building programme for navy, customs and police. This capability continues to be evolved to bigger FPbs from 28 m to 57 m and yachts of 60 m. The shipyard also started making tankers of 3,000 DWT to 3,500 DWT with technology transfer from Japan. They have also made landing Platform Dock 125m, landing Craft Vehicle and personnel, landing Craft unit etc. This year the company has already signed the contract to supply a total of two strategic sealift vessels to the Philippine navy. other developmen­ts are: in april 2011, PT Pal, jointly with netherland, started designing a new light frigate for ASW purposes. it will be the largest warship built by PT PAL. The first steel cutting ceremony was held in January 2014 and order for two Pkr ships is confirmed. They will be equipped with Vl mica missiles and oerlikon millennium Close-in weapon system.

indonesian navy has accepted a grant of two british made, used patrol boats equipped with guided missiles from brunei.

During January 2012, the navy had confirmed the order for the 24 guidedmiss­ile fast boats for deploying in shallow waters. in December 2013 indonesia had inducted 4 KCR-40S (40 m Fast missile boat).

indonesian navy also plans to acquire three new british corvettes. initially they were built for brunei but were

Kongsberg’s relations with the Indonesian Navy and DSME go back to January 2010 when it was contracted by DSME for the upgrade of Indonesian Navy Type 209 submarine

rejected as they did not meet their requiremen­ts and are available at discounted prices.

The navy has a modest air arm which was primarily equipped for naval reconnaiss­ance and coastal patrol duties. It has already received the first of the three maritime patrol aircraft Cn235 MPA version (jointly developed by Casa of spain and indonesia) and plans to buy 11 anti-submarine helicopter­s in 2014 which may be seasprite or agusta.

The us had provided indonesia with 12 surveillan­ce radars for the surveillan­ce of the malacca strait and the makassar strait during 2008. us has also funded an integrated maritime surveillan­ce system which includes coastal surveillan­ce stations, ship-based radars, regional command and two fleet command centres.

indonesia also maintains a small marine corps with amphibious capability. it has also establishe­d an independen­t body, the indonesia sea and Coast guard (klkP) in 2009.

Submarines. indonesia is located along one of the world's most critical submarine choke points due to the strait of malacca through which a large percentage of the shipping trade moves. add to this the shallow littoral waters around the indonesian archipelag­o and the area becomes ideal submarine hunting grounds however indonesia has only 2 Cakra class / u209 submarines and thus has to rely on its surface fleet for maritime security. Indonesian navy has projected a force level of 10 submarines by 2024 when its 2 Cakra class submarines will also be obsolescen­t if not obsolete. Daewoo shipbuildi­ng of south korea had won a contract during December 2011 for $1.07 billion to provide three 1,400-tonne Type 209 Chang bogo class submarines, two of which are to be built in south korea, while the third one is to be assembled in indonesia by PT PAL. The first two boats are to be delivered in 2015 and 2016; the third has been scheduled for 2018. The project is lagging behind and revised schedule is for two submarines to be delivered in 2017 and the submarine from PT Pal in 2019-20. PT Pal has also been allotted $250 million to upgrade its facilities.

kongsberg Defence systems naval systems & surveillan­ce division has been awarded a $55.5 million contract by Daewoo shipbuildi­ng and marine engineerin­g (Dsme) for the supply of msi-90u mk 2 submarine command and fire control system components for three new submarines under constructi­on. kongsberg's relations with the indonesian navy and Dsme go back to January 2010 when it was contracted by Dsme for the upgrade of indonesian navy Type 209 submarine kri nanggala for replacing the legacy signaal sinbaDs weapon control system with two multifunct­ion common consoles and a Tbi 110a torpedo board interface.

Kongsberg’s MSI-90U Mk 2

submarine command teams must have the best tools while dealing with the massive volume of data that is produced by the submarines more and more sophistica­ted sensors. msi-90u mk 2 submarine Combat Management System is designed specifical­ly for this. it is based on a fully distribute­d, easily-upgradeabl­e open computer architectu­re, laid out around a high-bandwidth data bus and employing state-ofthe-art software. The standardis­ed multifunct­ion operator consoles, equipped with the latest flat-screen LCD displays, offer the most user friendly human-computer interface available today. msi-90u mk 2 is a further developmen­t of the successful msi-90u system. The msi includes applicatio­n functions like sensor integratio­n, sensor administra­tion and control, contact/target correlatio­n, target motion analysis, classifica­tion and identifica­tion. it can carry out decision support and advisory functions, Tactical functions and weapon functions include torpedo preparatio­n firing, and control, as well as missile preparatio­n and firing, mine functions and torpedo counter-measures functions. The msi-90u mk 2 system is capable of performing simultaneo­us automatic and operator-in-the-loop target motion analysis computatio­n for more than 100 targets. The system can prepare and control up to eight torpedoes (Type Dm2a3, Type Dm2a4, Type a184 mod. 3, black SHARK/NSP or SUT) simultaneo­usly in the water. The system is prepared for firing and control up to four missiles (ugm-84 subharpoon, sm 39 exocet). Developmen­t activities are on to integrate the IDAS (interactiv­e Defence & attack system for submarines) missile.

indra of spain has tied up with Dsme to provide the three submarines with its radar signal detection system and a low Probabilit­y of intercept radar system. The value of the contract is in excess of $12.9 m. indra's system will help submarines to detect and analyse any radar signals that might be in their surroundin­gs and identify the emitter by type of vessel, submarine or aircraft.

Modernisat­ion Plans

in 2010 indonesia formulated strategic Defence Plan for developing a minimum essential Force (MEF) 2024 which includes ambitious plans like acquiring a 274-ship navy and 12 new diesel- electric submarines. 274 ships include 110 surface combatants, 66 patrol vessels and 98 support ships. The focus still remains the developmen­t of green Water capability which will concentrat­e on developing maritime anti-access capabiliti­es such as anti-ship missiles, fast attack craft, submarines, shore-launched missiles, land-based tactical fighter aircraft, sea mining and amphibious warfare assets. These plans take into account the security of its EEZ and 13,000 islands stretching from the andaman sea and india's andaman and nicobar islands to Timor and arafura sea with close proximity to australia.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: US Navy ?? Indonesian Navy Sigma-class corvette KRI Sultan Iskandar Muda (SIM 367)
PHOTOGRAPH: US Navy Indonesian Navy Sigma-class corvette KRI Sultan Iskandar Muda (SIM 367)
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: tnial.mil.id ?? KRI Ki Hajar Dewantara
PHOTOGRAPH: tnial.mil.id KRI Ki Hajar Dewantara

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