Sunday, June 19, 2011

Vietnam and China to conduct a joint patrol in Tonkin Gulf

Hopefully this is a sign that involving parties are putting the course of events back to normal after the all the excitement surrounding the South China Sea.

Original news in Vietnamese (here
Vietnam and China to conduct a joint patrol in Tonkin Gulf

http://en.baomoi.com/Info/Vietnam-and-China-to-conduct-a-joint-patrol-in-Tonkin-Gulf/3/154626.epi

Báo QĐND English -
Vietnam and China to conduct a joint patrol in Tonkin Gulf

PANO - Two Vietnamese naval boats, the HQ375 and HQ376 (under Corps M62, Naval Region D), representing Vietnam People’s Navy and Army, on June 18th, departed to take part in a joint patrol with China People’s Liberation Navy’s boats in the Gulf of Tonkin.

This is the 11th joint patrol that has been conducted since the two navies signed an agreement on Joint Patrol Status in October 2005.

As scheduled, the joint patrol started at 8am on June 19th and will finish at 10.15am on June 20th (Hanoi time) with a journey of 306 nautical miles.

The joint patrol aims to promote the traditional friendly neighbourhood cooperation relationship between Vietnam and China, as well as enhance the mutual understanding and trust between the two armies and navies.

The patrolled area is the delimitated waters that border Vietnam and China in the Tonkin Gulf. The patrol also targets to maintain security and order at sea, put forward the implementation of the Fish Farm Agreement, stabilise normal production activities of the two countries’ fishermen in the Tonkin Gulf and to share experiences between the two navies.

After the joint patrol, under the instruction from Chinese boats, two Vietnamese boats, led by Colonel Nguyen Van Kiem, Deputy-Chief-of-Naval Staff, will dock at Zhanjiang port to start their official friendly visit and exchange with China People’s Liberation Navy.





Photo of the day: Thunder Tiger celebrates 100 years of the Republic of China














Friday, June 17, 2011

CDF OpEd: RoCN and the South China Sea dispute

Recently, tensions have sharpened in the South China Sea as a result of territorial and resource exploration disputes over the Spratly Islands, primarily amongst the PRC, Vietnam, and the Philippines. In the latest turn of events, the RoCN has unexpectedly deployed missile boats to patrol the Spratlys and stationed armored detachments on RoC-controlled islets in the region, ostensibly with the enthusiastic approval of Beijing, as articulated (here)

In doing so, it seems that Ma Yingjiu and the KMT have - as of this moment - turned out to be the biggest winner of all relevant parties in the nuanced political theatrics of this dispute. Internally, it would be difficult for the DPP to oppose this move, since Ma is taking tangible steps to protect and reaffirm "Taiwan's sovereignty". Across the strait, he is winning friends both inside Zhongnanhai and on the street, for he appears to be sabre rattling on Beijing's behalf, but simultaneously outshining the CPC in the eyes of more hawkish Chinese patriots through an overt and determined show of force (compared to Beijing's less provocative deployment of a single maritime law enforcement vessel). Other Southeast Asian contestants of the Spratlys would also be hesitant of strongly opposing the RoCN's latest maneuvers, since - from a realist perspective - it would not be wise on their part to drive Taiwan and the Mainland toward more overt and sustained policy coordination in the Spratlys dispute.

This show of force has allowed the RoC to demonstrate relevance (domestically on both sides of the strait as well as regionally in South East Asia) and consolidate territorial claims at minimal risk and political cost. Well played!
-- Mr.unknown
Taiwan plans missile boats in disputed Spratlys
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110612/wl_asia_afp/taiwandiplomacyspratlys_20110612185539
(AFP)

AFP: Taiwan plans missile boats in disputed Spratlys


TAIPEI — Taiwan is planning to deploy missile boats in the South China Sea and tanks on disputed islands as regional tensions mount over territorial differences, a military spokesman said Sunday.

Taiwan's defence ministry said it feared coastguards now stationed in the Spratlys, claimed by several nations, and the Pratas islands, claimed by China, may not be sufficiently heavily-equipped to handle potential conflicts.

"Currently the coastguards in the Nansha (Spratlys) and Tungsha (Pratas) are only armed with light weapons," Taiwan's defence ministry spokesman David Lo told AFP.

"The missile boats and tanks is an option we've offered to the coastguards," he said, without specifying numbers and adding that the coastguard had yet to make a final decision.

Local media said the missile boats' presence would serve as a deterrent.

Each of Taiwan's 47-tonne Seagull class boats is armed with two Hsiungfeng I missiles, a ship-to-ship weapon with a range of 40 kilometres (24 miles).

The remarks come as China becomes increasingly assertive in the potentially resource-rich South China Sea, following several years of relative quiet.

Taiwan on Saturday reiterated its claims to the Spratlys, along with three other island groups in the South China Sea, amid a flare-up in regional tensions over rival claims.

Taiwan, Vietnam, Brunei, China, Malaysia, and the Philippines claim all or part of the Spratlys, which could lie on top of large oil reserves.

The Taiwanese coastguard currently has a 130-strong garrison on Taiping, the biggest island in the Spratlys archipelago, which has a runway to smooth logistical support.

The Philippine military in April said it planned to use a new US-made vessel to boost patrols in the disputed waters, after a complaint about Chinese patrol boats harassing a Philippine oil exploration vessel in the area.

Singapore is playing host to China's MSA31


China sends patrol ship into disputed South China Sea

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-13796958

16 June 2011 Last updated at 09:55 ET

China has sent one of it largest patrol ships through the South China Sea amid heightened tension over the disputed waters.

The Haixun-31 sailed on Wednesday and will monitor shipping and "protect maritime security" on its way to Singapore, state media said.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman described the trip as routine.

Several Asian nations claim territory in the waters that include shipping lanes and may contain oil and gas.

The Philippines and Vietnam recently accused Chinese vessels of aggressive actions in the South China Sea.

On Monday Vietnam staged a live-fire exercise in the area which Chinese state media denounced as a military show of force.

The 3,000-tonne Haixun-31, operated by the Chinese Maritime Safety Administration, will pass near the Paracel and Spratly island groups. officials said. The islands are at the heart of disputes with other governments.

The official Beijing Daily newspaper said the ship - which has a helicopter pad and can stay at sea for up to 40 days - would monitor shipping, carry out surveying, inspect oil wells and "protect maritime security".

Earlier this week, Beijing said it would not resort to the use of force to resolve its maritime border disputes.

Vietnam, China, the Philippines, Taiwan, Brunei and Malaysia have competing claims to the Spratlys while Beijing and Hanoi are in dispute over the Paracels.

Hanoi, which chaired the regional grouping Asean last year, has actively promoted a multilateral solution. However, China says it prefers to negotiate with individual states separately.



Thursday, June 16, 2011

Photo of the day: Sharp Knife 2011

China and Indonesia launched a united training for their Special Forces from China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and Indonesia’s National Armed Forces (TNI) on Monday.

The united training, with a code name of “Sharp Knife 2011″, is the first one between PLA and TNI in the history. The event is expected to further consolidate the friendship between China and Indonesia, as well as PLA and TNI. It is also aimed at improving bilateral mutual understanding and trusts and promoting pragmatic exchange and cooperation between the two armies.

The 69 commanders and soldiers from PLA would join all the three phases in the united training, which are respectively the exchange and exhibition, the composite formation training, and the comprehensive exercise. They would join hands with counterparts from the Indonesian TNI special force in the training and exercise with an assumed background as terrorist organization bringing panic by seizing hostages.

The main section of the training is the united field exercises on counter-terrorist missions such as rescuing hostages. The training is scheduled to be concluded on June 17.

Zhao Zongqi, Chief of staff of the Ji’nan Military Command, and Lodewijk F. Paulus, Indonesian TNI special force commander, attended the opening ceremony for the united training. They delivered speeches on behalf of PLA and TNI respectively and visited the exhibition of gears and weapons of each other.

Source: Xinhua






Say no to trailer park.

Looks like the PLAN does not like to see single-wides parked at their prime real estate – get those tornado magnets outta here.




Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Arab Spring? Chinese marketing opportunities!

Due to the increasing demands for anti-riot gears as a result of the recent events, Chinese defense companies responded by a renewed marketing drive with their latest offerings.

Here are some of their marketing posters targeting Middle East customers.

A nice touch with the refinery backdrop.









Sunday, June 12, 2011

Communist propaganda of the day: The importance of teamwork

PLA's new engineering equipments on display

PLA Engineer Command College holds 1st cross-regional combined joint-training exercise

(Source: Xinhua) 2011-06-02

The Engineer Command College of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) organized a cross-regional combined joint-training exercise coded as "Vanguard 2011” on June 1 in the Queshan Combined Tactical Training Base of the Jinan Theater. This is the first cross-regional teaching-oriented exercise by mixing graduating cadets of this year, combat troops, reserve troops, research units and the combined tactical training base.

The participating troops involved nearly 2,000 people, including the graduating cadets majored in intermediate/junior command from the PLA Engineer Command College, a camouflage regiment under the PLA General Staff Headquarters (GSH), an engineer regiment of a group army of the PLA Nanjing Military Area Command (MAC), an engineer research institute under the GSH of the PLA, and reserve officers of the rotated training. The exercise employed 600-plus sets of large engineering equipment and devices. Taking joint mountain attack operation under information-based conditions as the background, this exercise highlighted such engineer subjects as road and bridge rush repair, field command post and helicopter landing field construction, artillery and air defense position camouflage, field water supply station creation, and sabotage of important objectives in enemy’s rear, meanwhile drilled on how to assist local government in the implementation of tasks such as disaster relief, counter-terrorism and explosive removal in military operations other than war, and carried out combat operation tests on 22 new types of large equipment including new field electronic protection shelter, contaminated road cleaning vehicle, armored barrier-breaking vehicle and rocket mine-laying system.

The aim of the "Vanguard 2011” exercise is to find out problems in joint-training and jointly explore a new combat power generation mode.

By Li Yun and Zheng Wenhao