The list of Type54's potential customers keep growing, first Pakistan, then Bangladesh, (Algeria?) now Thailand.
Bangkok to talk frigate purchase with Beijing
The government has
formed a committee to negotiate with a Chinese team on purchase of
three frigates to enhance Thai’s naval strength in the resourceful Gulf
of Thailand, officials said. Both the sides will work out details of the
state-to-state frigate purchase agreement the groundwork of which was
laid during the visit of Prime Minister Wen Jiabao to Thailand in
November 2012.
The Thai government has recently approved the
purchase of two medium-sized frigates with a budget of 1 billion U.S.
dollars after denying allegation about the countrys navy persistent
request for submarines. However, Beijing had offered three of its Type
054T frigates at a very lower rate and the number of the frigates on
conditions that Bangkok can not be denied. Some source said these
special offer include six Z-9EC ASW helicopters.
Officials said
the armed forced division had planned to utilize budgetary allocations
of the 1 billion U.S. dollar fund, approved by the Yingluck Cabinet for
the procurement of the frigates, is to be spent for a 10-year period,
beginning from current fiscal year. The three frigates are unlikely be
procured at the same time.
Type 054T frigate may be an improved
version of the Type 054A frigate, possibly designated F40T, for which
discussions have been held between Thailand and China.
Officials
said commissioning of the type 054T frigates would help the capability
of the Thai maritime force in Anti-submarine warfare in the Gulf of
Thailand, the dimension of which had changed a lot in the last one
decade amid growing interest of Cambodia, Malaysia and Vietnam in the
area.
Officials also said Malaysia also plans to acquire two more
Scorpène class submarines and Vietnam has recently purchased from
Russia six Kilo class submarines and Russian submarine have already been
delivered, the delivery of all six submarines will be completed before
2016 and most important thing is Cambodia has already started Submarine
project.
Thailand and its neighbor Cambodia were on the edge of
conflict in the Gulf in the past 10 years over oil and gas exploration
by the latter in the disputed areas. Both the countries had engaged in
legal battle over the disputed areas in an international court.
Besides,
Thailand is still running a legal battle against another neighbor,
Malaysia, over maritime boundary and also the most revealing public
statement by any military top brass on the nature and consequences of
the Thai Deep South conflict since violence resumed in January 2004.
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/
Made-in-China warships off to Gulf of Aden
Hunt begins for Somali pirates
Armed task force sets sail on security mission
http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/local/195695/hunt-begins-for-somali-pirates
Two
Thai navy ships with 351 sailors and 20 special warfare troops on board
have set sail for the Gulf of Aden to take part in the hunt for pirates
off the coast of Somalia.
The mission marks the first time Thailand has sent forces overseas to protect its own interest.
The
HTMS Pattani and HTMS Similan left yesterday with two helicopters
lashed to the decks from Chuk Samet port at Chon Buri's Sattahip naval
base to join a 28-country effort to police the shipping lanes off the
Somali coast, which has become a piracy hotbed.
"The key mission
of this 98-day operation is to protect Thai cargo ships and fishing
vessels in those waters," said Adm Supakorn Buranadilok, Commander of
the Royal Thai Navy Fleet.
The navy expects up to 60 Thai ships to pass through the Gulf of Aden during the course of the operation.
The navy's SEALs unit will be part of the fleet involved in the mission.
The budget for the mission has been set at 270 million baht.
The ships are expected to take 17 days to reach the Gulf of Aden on a journey covering 4,573 nautical miles.
The ships are expected to return about Dec 12.
Two
navy ships with 371 sailors and special warfare marines on board set
sail from Thailand to take part in international operations to protect
ships from pirates in the Gulf of Aden and off Somalia. JETJARAS NA
RANONG
Political chaos and civil war in Somalia have allowed piracy to flourish off the country's 3,100km coastline.
Somali pirates were involved in more than half of the 406 reported pirate attacks worldwide last year.
They
mounted 217 attacks in 2009, hijacking 47 ships and taking 867 crew
members hostage with ransoms believed to total US$50 million (1.6
billion baht).
A number of Thai ships have been hijacked by Somali pirates over the past five years.
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