Gulf News

New drones to help Australia patrol waters

CANBERRA HAS BEEN EMBARKING ON ITS LARGEST PEACETIME NAVAL INVESTMENT

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These aircraft will significan­tly enhance our anti-submarine warfare and maritime strike capability, as well as ... search and rescue capability.”

Australia will invest A$7 billion (Dh25.7 billion) to develop and buy high-tech US drones for joint military operations and to monitor waters including the South China Sea, it said Tuesday.

Canberra has been embarking on its largest peacetime naval investment through a massive shipbuildi­ng strategy that includes new submarines, offshore patrol vessels and frigates to shore up its defence capabiliti­es.

As part of this, the government will spend A$1.4 billion to buy the first of six MQ-4C Triton maritime surveillan­ce drones, with the aircraft to enter service from mid-2023, complement­ing seven P-8A Poseidon planes currently in use.

“Together these aircraft will significan­tly enhance our anti-submarine warfare and maritime strike capability, as well as our search and rescue capability,” Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said in a statement.

“This investment will protect our borders and make our region more secure.”

The drones — high-altitude, long endurance aircraft that can support missions for up to 24 hours and provide a 360-degree view of their surroundin­gs for over 2,000 nautical miles — will replace the AP-3C Orion spy plane.

“It gives us enormous capabiliti­es in surveillan­ce and reconnaiss­ance,” Defence Industry Minister Christophe­r

Malcolm Turnbull | Australia PM

Pyne told Sky News, adding that the total cost was about A$7 billion.

“Australia’s responsibl­e for about 10 per cent of the world’s surface into the Indian Ocean, the Pacific, down to Antarctica up into the South China Sea.”

Insisting on rights

Pyne added that the drones would be used to monitor who was in Australian waters, other countries’ naval vessels, for people-smuggling and illegal fishing.

The unmanned systems would also continue Australia’s surveillan­ce of the South China Sea, he added.

“Australia insists on its rights to be able to travel through the South China Sea, in internatio­nal waters as we have always done, whether it is with surface ships or aircraft,” Pyne said.

China claims sovereignt­y over virtually all the resource-endowed South China Sea, despite rival claims from its neighbours.

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