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For the first time India and Quad nations to join France for war games​

By: Huma Siddiqui|
Updated: Mar 25, 2021 9:22 PM

For the first time ever Indian Navy will participate in the French naval exercise in the Bay of Bengal early next month. According to sources Quad member nations are going to be part of this drill – the US, Japan and Australia.


April is going to be a busy month for the French Navy in the Indian Ocean. It is deploying its Carrier Battle Group to the region and participating in two major exercises – La Perouse a French Naval war game which will have the Quad countries and the other Ex Varuna a trilateral exercise with India and the UAE in the western Indian Ocean. This, according to an Indian Navy veteran “underlines the importance France accords to the entire Indo-Pacific where its economic and strategic interests including a large EEZ interests extend from the Horn of Africa to beyond Polynesia.”

“France has always maintained a significant naval presence in the Indian Ocean headed by a 2-star Admiral called Alindien and was also the first country to appoint an observer at the IOR-IFC (Indian Ocean Region Information Fusion Centre) set up by India on the outskirts of the national capital,” Commodore Anil Jai Singh, Vice President of the Indian Maritime Foundation, tells Financial Express Online.

Indo-France Military Relations

“The strategic relationship between France and India, which has been on an upward trajectory ever since France was supportive of India’s nuclear tests in 1998 when most of the western world’s first reaction was to impose sanctions, has expanded considerably in the last two decades. The fact that India is a large defence market also helps. Encouraging India to buy French weapons and equipment is part of the French Government’s thrust in India and the success can be seen in the sale of the Project 75 submarines and the Rafale fighter aircraft amongst others through a G2G arrangement,” Commodore Anil Jai Singh, says.

The former Indian Navy submariner says, “France is also pitching very strongly for the P75(I) submarine programme and is projecting itself as an integral part of India’s ‘Atmnirbharta’ drive though any meaningful transfer of technology showing this resolve is yet to be seen. France has also offered to share its civilian nuclear technology and has offered nuclear reactors to India.”

“This deepening bilateral relationship also dovetails seamlessly into the larger French engagement with the region and strengthens the ‘arc of maritime democracies’ in their efforts to ensure a Free and Open Indo-Pacific and maintain a rules-based international order in the region particularly in the maritime domain,” he says.

India-France Maritime Cooperation

According to Commodore Singh, “The French naval ships are also visiting Kochi later in April. Following the articulation of its Indo-Pacific strategy it is the first country in the world to have appointed an Ambassador to the Indo-Pacific and is also looking to deepen the European engagement with this region. This was reflected in the Indo-Pacific strategies that followed from Euro-centric countries like Germany and The Netherlands who also appreciate the importance of ensuring a Free and Open Indo-Pacific and the safety and security of their trade.”

Bilateral Naval Drills

The 18th edition of the Indo-French bilateral naval Ex Varuna is scheduled in the last week of April. Last year due to the global pandemic Ex Varuna could not take place in its original format. This year the drill is taking place during the ongoing tensions between India and China. There will be larger participation of air assets from both navies; interoperability and jointness, and maritime security as the focus. Also on carrier operations and Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) training, and air surveillance. Besides the three Kalvari class (Scorpene) and other ships, the air component of the exercise will witness dogfights between the Mig-29K fighters and Rafale-M, P-8I Maritime Patrol Aircraft, helicopters and other assets will be part of drill.

More about Ex Varuna

The Indo-French bilateral service exercise was initiated in 1983 and is the base of the strategic partnership between the two countries. And was christened as ‘Varuna’ in 2001.

And these war games between the two countries have fully-grown in scope and complexity and are in line with the Joint Strategic Vision Cooperation within the Indian Ocean Region.

La Perouse

For the first time ever Indian Navy will participate in the French naval exercise in the Bay of Bengal early next month. According to sources Quad member nations are going to be part of this drill – the US, Japan and Australia.

According to the Indian Navy officials, the drill is from April 5-7.

Significance of the drills

The drills which are taking place soon after the first ever Leader’s Summit of the Quad and the visits of the US Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin and the defence Minister of South Korea Mr Suh Wook.




@Vergennes
 

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Quad navies have the ability to come together if an opportunity arises, Indian Navy Chief Admiral Karambir Singh said also pointing out that China is making attempts to replicate the US Navy carrier battle groups as they expand.

“If an opportunity arises, we have the capability and capacity to come together in an almost plug and play manner,” Admiral Singh said at a discussion during the ongoing Raisina Dialogue where he was also joined by Admiral Scot Davidson, Commander of US Navy’s Indo-Pacific Command.

“China’s intention is to replicate carrier battle groups like the United States Navy by adding more aircraft carriers and accompanying by fleet support ships and destroyers. The most important capability they have to develop is the competence of their carrier air wing which takes time. US operating aircraft since the world war, but I think the Chinese are moving quickly," said Indian Navy chief Admiral Karambir Singh.

He said there has been a regular Chinese naval presence in the Indian Ocean Region for over a decade now.

“If the Chinese look west from where they are, their energy, markets and resources are located to their West. So, it won't be surprising that soon they would be coming into the Indian Ocean, as there is a saying that the flag follows the trade.”

He was part of the discussion ‘Samudra Manthan’: The Indo-Pacific in Churn’.

Admiral Davidson spoke of China being the greatest threat strategic threat to international order and the importance of Quad nations coming together.

India, US, Japan and Australia form the Quad aimed at military and diplomatic cooperation. The four nations last year got together for the first of its kinds naval war games involving their navies.

Currently, China is building its third and largest aircraft carrier as part of its navy’s expansion plans.

For the future, the PLA Navy is looking at six aircraft carriers.

Indian Navy Chief said that in the Indian Ocean region, the Indian Navy's aim is to be a Preferred Security Partner. “Be credible and forward-leaning in our engagements, be first responders,” said the Indian Navy chief.

Indian Navy chief talked about the need to shun the transactional nature of engagements, work with regional navies to build their capacities to secure their interests, as also work with like-minded navies to build interoperability and trust.

Talking about military cooperation, Admiral Singh said that as far as the military part is concerned, navies of Australia, Japan, the US and India already enjoy a high degree of interoperability.

On Indo-Pacific, the Indian Navy Chief said, “Given the expanse of Indo-Pacific, no one can do it alone. Expanse is an incentive for nations to work together. Indian Navy is ready to do its bit to contribute to security and stability. We can build collective maritime competence, and learn from each other.”

He said there is a natural desire among most nations in the region to cooperate and collaborate for greater prosperity. “Indo-Pacific provides tremendous opportunities for ‘issue-based convergences’. Convergence, as you know, can lead to cohesion.”

Indian navy chief said akin to the mythological ‘Samudra Manthan’, “we can work together, extract many treasures and ultimately the ‘Amrit’ Heavenly Nectar”. “There exist many avenues for maritime nations in the Indo-Pacific to come together and ensure that the ocean churn should be to the benefit of all,” he said.

“So I remain positive of what the churn in the Indo-Pacific would bring to the region, and to the world at large,” said Indian Chief adding, “When we look at the Indo-Pacific, what stands out, is its predominant maritime character and we know that Oceans Connect, they don’t Divide.”
 

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Kenneth I. Juster served as the 25th U.S. ambassador to the Republic of India from November 2017 to January 2021. He previously served from January 2017 to June 2017 as the deputy assistant to the president for international economic affairs, on both the National Security Council and the National Economic Council.

When I gave my farewell address in January as the U.S. ambassador to India, one issue threatened to overshadow the many accomplishments in our bilateral relationship — whether the United States would impose sanctions on India for its planned purchase of five Russian S-400 Triumf surface-to-air missile systems. The Biden administration is now confronting this same predicament. In mid-March, President Joe Biden joined the leaders of Australia, India, and Japan for the first-ever Quadrilateral Security Dialogue summit, presenting to the world a democratic model of cooperation that sharply contrasts with the autocratic model of China. Yet, one week later, when U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin visited New Delhi, the headlines focused not on this high-level cooperation, but on the same threat of possible U.S. sanctions against India.

The U.S.-Indian partnership is now critical to promoting a free, open, and stable Indo-Pacific region and resisting the threat of an expansionist China. But the cloud of sanctions has hovered over the relationship since August 2017, when the United States enacted the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA). The mere mention of CAATSA brings back bad memories in India of earlier U.S. sanctions, including those following India’s 1998 nuclear tests. Keeping the possibility of CAATSA sanctions lurking over the relationship jeopardizes vital U.S. interests by gradually eroding the trust and cooperation that has been assiduously built up with India since the turn of the century.


It is long overdue for the U.S. government to remove the specter of sanctions by determining, in the case of the S-400, that India meets the conditions for a waiver. The two countries should then focus their attention on the long-term operational challenges posed by Indian purchases of Russian equipment.


The Controversial Use of Secondary Sanctions

Sanctions have become a favored tool of American policymakers in recent years. In some ways, this is understandable. When a major foreign policy problem arises, U.S. officials often feel the need to respond with some form of action, without deploying the military or risking broader conflict. They therefore tend to choose a measure between the use of force and doing nothing — economic or political sanctions.

Currently, there are U.S. sanctions of one sort or another directed against at least 30 countries or territories. However, the effect of sanctions on the target is often debatable at best, and sanctions frequently cause collateral damage. For example, sanctions can be harmful to U.S. companies that are no longer permitted to do business with the sanctioned entity, while benefiting foreign companies that can replace them because they are not affected by the U.S. sanctions. For this and other reasons, U.S. sanctions work best when they have broad multilateral support (such as the sanctions against Iran prior to the negotiation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) or when the United States has a large degree of influence over the target (such as the U.S. sanctions against Panama’s Noriega regime in the late 1980s).

A particularly controversial element of sanctions policy is the use of so-called secondary sanctions. These involve pressure on third parties to stop their activities with the sanctioned entity by threatening U.S. sanctions against the third party. The United States has periodically used this form of sanctions, usually when there is little support from other countries for direct sanctions or little U.S. influence over the target.

As one might expect, U.S. secondary sanctions are quite unpopular with the rest of the world. Some commentators argue that the extraterritorial application of secondary sanctions violates international law. At a minimum, such secondary sanctions are controversial and can cause unrelated foreign policy problems. CAATSA is a case in point.

The purpose of CAATSA is to counter aggression by the governments of Russia, Iran, and North Korea. While the Iran and North Korea provisions do not have a material impact on most U.S. firms because of preexisting restrictions on doing business with those countries, the Russia provisions are broad, with significant secondary sanctions directed at non-U.S. entities. One part of CAATSA requires the president to impose five or more sanctions from a menu of 12 on a person who knowingly “engages in a significant transaction with a person that is part of, or operates for or on behalf of, the [Russian] defense or intelligence sectors.” To date, these secondary sanctions have been imposed on China and Turkey, each for importing and installing Russian S-400 systems.

Any collateral damage in these two cases is acceptable under the circumstances. In the context of an increasingly adversarial military relationship between the United States and China, such sanctions do little harm. Because Turkey is a NATO ally, the sanctions raise more questions. But it is precisely because of Turkey’s NATO status that it should not be incorporating Russian missile systems into its military arsenal, especially when it is also a member of the allied consortium developing and producing the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. Turkey’s acquisition of the S-400 thus represents a conscious move away from the United States and NATO. This led Washington to remove Ankara from the F-35 program so that the features and technology of that fighter would not be compromised by proximity to the S-400. The difficult decision to sanction Turkey, therefore, was regrettable but understandable.


CAATSA’s Potential Damage to U.S.-Indian Relations

India, which is neither an ally nor an adversary of the United States, has a long history of purchasing military hardware from the Soviet Union and later Russia. But India has gradually diversified its inventory of military supplies in recent years, with increased purchases from the United States since 2008, which now total over $20 billion. The purchases include important naval assets, such as the P-8I maritime patrol and anti-submarine aircraft and the MH-60 Romeo helicopter, which will enhance maritime security in the Indian Ocean region.

Many U.S. defense firms now have a presence in India, facilitating co-production of defense equipment and the integration of Indian companies into the supply chains of U.S. defense manufacturers. The Tata-Boeing joint venture in Hyderabad will soon become the sole location for the production of Apache helicopter fuselages, and the Tata-Lockheed joint venture, also in Hyderabad, supplies all of Lockheed’s C-130 empennages and will soon be its source for F-16 wings. These important contributions to the U.S.-Indian defense partnership, along with India’s diversification away from Russian equipment, support the broad policy goal of CAATSA.

India believes that the S-400 missile system provides a significant capability against potential threats from China and Pakistan. New Delhi started discussing this system with Moscow around 2012. Although India already had a missile defense dialogue with the United States well before the discussions with Russia began, the Obama administration was reluctant to provide advanced missile defense systems to India. In any event, India announced its intention to purchase the S-400 in 2016, almost one year prior to the enactment of CAATSA. India and Russia formally signed their agreement in 2018. The United States subsequently offered surface-to-air missile equipment to India in late 2018 — the Patriot Advanced Capability-3 and the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense. From the Indian perspective, however, the U.S. equipment does not have the same needed operational capabilities as the S-400 and is much more expensive. Moreover, India felt that it already had a “done deal” with Russia.

In part with India in mind, the U.S. Congress amended the CAATSA legislation in 2018 to permit a waiver of the secondary sanctions under certain conditions, including whether the concerned country is cooperating with the United States on critical security matters and taking steps to reduce its procurement of major defense equipment from Russia. To date, the U.S. position has been that it has not yet granted any waivers under CAATSA and that allies and partners should forgo transactions with Russia that risk triggering the sanctions.

From the U.S. perspective, because India has not yet acquired the S-400 system, and thus not made a “significant transaction,” it is premature to consider either potential sanctions or a waiver. Austin indicated as much after meeting with Indian Defense Minister Rajnath Singh: “There has been no delivery of an S-400 system and the issue of sanctions is not being discussed.”

There may be internal disagreements in the Biden administration, as there were in the Trump administration, on whether to grant a waiver to India for the purchase of the S-400. Or perhaps the Biden administration has decided internally to issue a waiver to India if and when the S-400 is delivered, but it prefers not to state that now to avoid establishing a precedent for other partners considering the purchase of the S-400 or other Russian equipment. The administration may even hope that an intervening event will preclude the delivery of the Russian missile system to India.

Continuing to kick the sanctions can down the road, however, has a corrosive effect on the U.S.-Indian relationship. It undermines the hard work by both countries during the past 21 years to overcome a lack of trust and, for India, a lingering concern about the reliability of the United States as a defense partner.

Some policymakers, who may be concerned about the precedent of a CAATSA waiver, have suggested that the United States could invoke the CAATSA provisions, but deliberately select five sanctions from the broader menu that have little material impact on India. There is merit to the concern about a precedent. But in the unique circumstances of this particular case, this concern is outweighed by the harm that such sanctions, even if used only symbolically, would do to the U.S.-Indian relationship.


The Challenges Posed by India’s Purchases of Russian Equipment

CAATSA’s effort to pressure Russia to curb its aggressive activity in Ukraine and elsewhere, as well as deny hard currency to the Russians, is certainly an important U.S. interest. However, the sustained effort by the United States to deepen its relationship with India in forming a pillar of stability and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific is also critical to U.S. geopolitical objectives. If India ultimately acquires the S-400 and the U.S. government imposes sanctions, the result will be to damage the U.S.-Indian relationship without punishing Russia.

Given the circumstances that led India to conclude its S-400 deal, the best course of action for U.S. officials, in balancing its two foreign policy priorities, is to face up to the issue now. After consultations with Congress to explain its views, the Biden administration should indicate its intention to grant a waiver to India for a transaction that is bound to happen anyway. At the same time, it should emphasize that all waiver decisions will remain strictly on a case-by-case basis. U.S. officials should also begin a frank and open discussion with Indian officials about the broader set of underlying issues that CAATSA obscures — the impact on the bilateral strategic partnership of the S-400 procurement and future Indian purchases of significant Russian military equipment.

In the course of these bilateral discussions, New Delhi can explain why, especially in cases where other countries do not have or will not offer comparable equipment, it wants to continue to make purchases from Russia that it views as critical to its national security. And Washington can make clear its position on malign Russian activities as well as concerns about possibly compromising U.S. technology due to Russian equipment in India’s inventory. In this context, the United States should raise topics such as the positive impact that sophisticated U.S. equipment and technology could have on India’s overall military capabilities, the benefits of increased interoperability of Indian and American forces, and the constraints that Russian military equipment in the Indian inventory could impose on the U.S. ability to support India in the case of a future military conflict with China.

The United States might also note that China has already acquired the S-400 system from Russia, so that if India is concerned about its defensive capabilities against China, it will be relying on a system that China knows well, including possibly how to circumvent it.


Looking Ahead

As the U.S. government balances its various interests regarding the S-400 issue, it should recognize that the continued threat of CAATSA sanctions against India is counterproductive in terms of the bilateral partnership as well as the broader U.S. strategy in the Indo-Pacific. The United States should therefore indicate now its intention to grant a waiver in this case, while starting a constructive dialogue with India on the impact of future purchases of Russian military equipment. The government of India will ultimately have to decide on its own trade-offs regarding American and Russian equipment, as well as on its long-term strategic orientation. Perhaps there will be technical solutions that mitigate some of India’s potential challenges. It is possible, however, that India’s decisions will eventually affect the degree to which Washington will be able to provide special access for New Delhi to its most sophisticated technology. The consideration of all of these sensitive and important issues should not be clouded by the threat of secondary sanctions.
 

Gary

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It would be very unwise to sanction India for a Russian missile system, consider the geopolitical weight that India has to offer with regards to US foreign policy initiative in Asia.

The failure to help with vaccines should not be followed by sanctions.
 

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Sanctioning India for pursuing a Russian missile system is far too irrational. Instead of Sanctioning partners for pursuing a cheaper alternative to the patriot system, the US needs to come up with its own alternatives if it wants to woo partners with smaller wallets.
 

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Usa has become like Oprah Winfrey.

You get sanctions everybody gets sanctions!!!
 

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The Biden Administration on Friday notified the Congress of its determination to sell six P-8I patrol aircraft to India for an estimated cost of USD 2.42 billion.

The Defense Security Cooperation Agency delivered the required certification notifying the Congress of this possible sale on Friday.

This proposed sale will support the foreign policy and national security of the United States by helping strengthen the US-Indian strategic relationship and improve the security of a major defensive partner, which continues to be an important force for political stability, peace and economic progress in the Indo-Pacific and South Asia region, the notification said.

The Indian Navy had procured eight P-8I aircraft from Boeing in January 2009 via direct commercial sale and contracted for an additional four aircraft in July 2016.

The first P-8I aircraft were delivered to the Indian Navy in 2013, providing critical capabilities to coalition maritime operations.

“This proposed sale of an additional six P-8I aircraft will allow the Indian Navy to expand its maritime surveillance aircraft (MSA) capability for the next 30 years. India will have no difficulty absorbing these aircraft into its armed forces. The proposed sale of this equipment and support will not alter the basic military balance in the region,” said the notification.
 

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New Delhi, June 23

India and the US on Wednesday kicked off a two-day multi-domain wargame in the Indian Ocean involving an array of air defence platforms to further consolidate their operational synergy in the face of China's increasing military presence in the region.

The US has deployed its naval carrier strike group, led by the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan, as well as a fleet of F-18 fighter jets and E-2C Hawkeye all-weather aircraft for the exercise, officials said.

The Indian assets at the exercise included Jaguar and Sukhoi-30MKI fighter jets, IL-78 air-to-air refuelling tanker aircraft, AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control System) aircraft and warships Kochi and Teg.

The Indian Navy has also deployed a fleet of P8I maritime surveillance aircraft and MiG 29K jets, apart from other platforms.

The US Carrier Strike Group (CSG) is currently deployed in the Indian Ocean region.

A carrier battle group or carrier strike group is a mega naval fleet comprising an aircraft carrier, accompanied by a large number of destroyers, frigates and other ships.

"The Indian naval warships, along with aircraft from the Indian Navy and the Indian Air Force will be engaged in the joint multi-domain operations with the carrier strike group comprising Nimitz-class aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan, Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Halsey and Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS Shiloh," Indian Navy's spokesperson Commander Vivek Madhwal said on Tuesday.

He said the two-day exercise aims to strengthen the bilateral relationship and cooperation by demonstrating the ability to integrate and coordinate comprehensively in maritime operations.

Officials said the high-tempo exercise will include advanced air-defence drills, cross-deck helicopter operations and anti-submarine manoeuvres with an aim to hone the war-fighting skills and enhance interoperability between the two sides.

The exercise is being carried out south of Thiruvananthapuram, on the western seaboard.

The officials said the exercise is focussing on multiple areas, including enhancing the aspects of interoperability, nuances of international integrated maritime search-and-rescue operations and exchange of best practices in the maritime airpower domain.

The Indo-US defence ties have been on an upswing in the last few years.

In June 2016, the US had designated India as a "Major Defence Partner".

The two countries have also inked key defence and security pacts over the last few years, including the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) in 2016 that allows their militaries to use each other's bases for repair and replenishment of supplies as well as provides for deeper cooperation.

The two sides have also signed the Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA) in 2018 that provides for interoperability between the two militaries and the sale of high-end technology from the US to India.

In October last year, India and the US sealed the Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement (BECA) to further boost the bilateral defence ties.

The pact provides for the sharing of high-end military technology, logistics and geospatial maps between the two countries. — PTI
 

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China on Thursday reacted angrily to United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken's meeting with a senior representative of the Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama in New Delhi, saying it is a violation of Washington's commitment acknowledging Tibet as part of China and not to support Tibetan independence

China on Thursday reacted angrily to United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken's meeting with a senior representative of the Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama in New Delhi, saying it is a violation of Washington's commitment acknowledging Tibet as part of China and not to support Tibetan independence


Asked for his reaction by the official media in Beijing at a press briefing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said, "Tibetan affairs are purely China's internal affairs that allow no foreign interference".

"The 14th Dalai Lama is by no means just a religious person but rather a political exile who has long been engaged in anti-China separatist activities attempting to split Tibet from China," he said.

China firmly opposes all forms of contacts between foreign officials and the Dalai Lama, he said.

"Any formal contact between the US and the Dalai clique is a violation of the US commitment to acknowledge Tibet as part of China, not to support Tibetan independence and attempts to separate it from China," he said.

"We urge the US to honour its commitment to stop meddling in China's internal affairs under the pretext of Tibetan affairs, and offer no support to Tibet independence forces to engage in anti-China separatist activities. China will take all necessary measures to defend its own interests," he said.

China comes up with such routine reactions whenever foreign dignitaries and officials meet the Dalai Lama or his representatives.

The 14th Dalai Lama has made India his home since fleeing his Tibetan homeland in 1959.

The Chinese government officials and the Dalai Lama or his representatives have not met in formal negotiations since 2010.

Beijing has in the past accused the 86-year-old Dalai Lama of indulging in "separatist" activities and trying to split Tibet and considers him as a divisive figure.

However, the Tibetan spiritual leader has insisted that he is not seeking independence but "genuine autonomy for all Tibetans living in the three traditional provinces of Tibet" under the "Middle-Way approach".

Blinken arrived in India on Tuesday on a maiden two-day visit with an extensive agenda featuring the rapidly evolving security situation in Afghanistan, boosting Indo-Pacific engagement and ways to enhance COVID-19 response efforts among others.
 

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Australia, India, Japan, and U.S. Kick-off exercise MALABAR 2021​

By Commander, Task Force 71 Public Affairs
PACIFIC OCEAN (NNS) – Maritime forces from Australia, Japan, India, and the United States began phase 1 of cooperative maritime exercise MALABAR 2021 in the Philippine Sea, Aug. 26.

MALABAR is an annual maritime exercise that enhances planning, training, and employment of advanced warfare tactics between the Royal Australian Navy (RAN), Indian Navy (IN), Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF), and U.S. Navy which demonstrates the commitment between like-minded nations to upholding a rules-based maritime order in the Indo-Pacific.

This year’s exercise is hosted by the U.S. Navy and will take part in two phases. The first phase is an opportunity for the four Indo-Pacific navies to operate together in the Philippines Sea to strengthen their skills in combined maritime operations, anti-submarine warfare operations, air warfare operations, live-fire gunnery events, replenishments-at-sea, cross-deck flight operations, and maritime interdiction operations.

This year the exercise includes Naval Special Warfare forces during phase 1 to address irregular maritime threats and enhance integration with traditional naval forces.

"MALABAR 21 is an excellent opportunity to conduct multi-national training to hone warfighting and maritime security skillsets,” said Capt. Chase Sargeant, commander, CTF 71. "U.S. destroyers closely integrating with our partners and allies builds the foundation for regional security and stability that benefits all Indo-Pacific nations."

U.S. participants for phase one include Pacific Fleet’s top sub hunter, Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Barry (DDG 52), Naval Special Warfare forces, maritime patrol and reconnaissance aircraft from Task Force 72, and Military Sealift Command’s (MSC) Henry J. Kaiser-class underway replenishment oiler USNS Rappahannock (T-AO 204).

"MALABAR 21 provides a wonderful opportunity to bolster our international partnerships," said Cmdr. Chris Gahl, commanding officer, USS Barry. "Our team is excited to demonstrate [anti-submarine warfare] capabilities and to collaborate alongside our Indo-Pacific partners and allies. The lessons and tactics we share will enhance our strength and capabilities in supporting the common vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific."

Elements of the Royal Australian, Indian, Japanese, and American maritime forces routinely operate together in the Indo-Pacific, fostering a cooperative approach toward regional security and stability to deter malign influence.

Representing the Indian Navy is Shivalik-class multi-role stealth frigate INS Shivalik (F 47), and Kamorta-class anti-submarine warfare corvette INS Kadmatt (P 29). Representing the JMSDF is Izumo-class multi-purpose operation destroyer JS Kaga (DDH 184), Murasame-class destroyers JS Murasame (DD 101) and JS Shiranui (DD 120). Representing Australia is Anzac-class frigate HMAS Warramonga (FFH 152). Maritime patrol and reconnaissance aircraft are scheduled to include an IN P-8, JMSDF P-1, and U.S. P-8A.

Under Commander, U. S. Pacific Fleet, 7th Fleet is the U.S. Navy's largest forward-deployed numbered fleet, and routinely interacts and operates with 35 maritime nations in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region.
 

Nilgiri

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This is the first Malabar exercise in the Eastern Pacific, no ??

@Nilgiri

It rotates into philippine sea every now and again: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malabar_(naval_exercise)#History

Philippine sea is western pacific area, between philippines and Guam.

Guam is where some of the ships seem to have gathered for the exercise start:

There are some sources that say a japanese submarine (soryu class?) will also be present:
 

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