South China Morning Post

Spy ship off coast of Australia ‘will help gather data’

- Minnie Chan minnie.chan@scmp.com

The deployment of a sophistica­ted Chinese navy spy ship close to a naval communicat­ion station on the west coast of Australia last week will help Beijing collect informatio­n about the United States’ active warships in the region, analysts have said.

The Type 815 Dongdiao-class auxiliary general intelligen­ce (AGI) ship Neptune, or Haiwangxin­g in Chinese, was a new advanced electromag­netic reconnaiss­ance vessel equipped with highly sensitive equipment to deter electronic signals of warships in the region, military experts said.

“The latest visit is a revisit of the PLA Type 815 AGI to Australian waters, implying the PLA has taken tours to the waters as regular missions, as Beijing may take Canberra as a potential rival given the clout of Aukus and the Quad,” said Lu Li-shih, a former instructor at Taiwan’s Naval Academy in Kaohsiung.

Lu referred to the security pact signed by the United States, Britain and Australia, as well as the informal four-sided defence group comprising the US, India, Australia and Japan.

Last week, Australian Defence Minister Peter Dutton described the actions of the Type 815 vessel as an “aggressive act” because it had sailed so far south and on May 11 came within 50 nautical miles of the Harold E Holt naval communicat­ions station at Exmouth, a facility used by Australian, US and allies’ submarines.

After the Exmouth stop, the PLA spy ship then apparently changed course and headed east along the coast towards Darwin in the Northern Territory, where the US has a permanent military base, according to a report published by The War Zone, an American military website.

In July last year, another PLA Dongdiao-class spy ship was spotted operating off the waters of Queensland during Exercise Talisman Sabre, biennial, bilateral US-Australia drills that include participat­ion by the Japanese and Canadian navies.

“Nowadays, we are all talking about all-domain operations involving land, sea, air, space, cyber and the electromag­netic spectrum, with the Type 815 spy ship playing a key role in electromag­netic warfare,” Lu said.

“The radar aperture on the Type 815 spy ship is able to receive a variety of different frequencie­s and spectra released by Australian and American warships in long distances that could become important data for electromag­netic warfare.”

Zhou Chenming, a researcher from the Yuan Wang military science and technology think tank, confirmed that all the radar systems and equipment on the Type 815 were more sophistica­ted than normal military devices, with the main task of tracking the trajectory of carrier rockets when China launched them into space.

“As the advanced systems to track and send data for flying carrier rockets, the ship is mainly used for finding the specific location at sea for falling rocket wreckages for recycling, but is also good at detecting hypersonic missiles,” Zhou said.

He said Australia might be overreacti­ng because Canberra did not have any hypersonic missiles.

The latest visit ... [implies] Beijing may take Canberra as a potential rival given the clout of Aukus and the Quad

LU LI-SHIH, NAVAL SECURITY EXPERT

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