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ASEAN Joint Patrols in the South China Sea?

Reashot Xigwin

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Singapore’s navy chief suggests that the idea could be realized soon.

thediplomat_2015-01-27_18-57-02-36x36.jpg

By Prashanth Parameswaran
May 12, 2015

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Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

On May 11, Singapore media outlets reported that Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia are in discussions to extend joint patrols to the lower reaches of the South China Sea to tackle piracy.

According to Singapore Chief of Navy Rear-Admiral Lai Chung Han, the states were hoping to start the patrols “sooner rather than later,” and Singapore is “more than ready to move on this.”

The idea of joint patrols by Southeast Asian states in the South China Sea has been floated both privately and publicly in the past. As I have written previously, the proposal made headlines earlier this year when Vice Admiral Robert Thomas said at the Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace Exhibition following the ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting in Malaysia that ASEAN countries could streamline cooperation on maritime security while respecting sovereignty and coastal space, as was the case with counter-piracy efforts in the Gulf of Aden.

As I suggested then and as Lai outlined, such patrols by Southeast Asian states in the South China Sea would be an extension of the Malacca Strait Patrols (MSP) undertaken by Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand. The MSP, which began in 2004, is a set of cooperative measures that includes air and sea patrols between these countries to tackle piracy.

Extending those patrols to the South China Sea would seem to make sense. Piracy is a rampant problem around Southeast Asian waters, which carry about half of world trade and a third of its oil supply. By some accounts, the problem may be getting worse. As I reported earlier, according to the International Maritime Bureau (IMB), Southeast Asia saw 141 piracy incidents in 2014, up from 126 in 2013. And for the first quarter of 2015, the IMB found that the region alone accounted for over half of the world’s piracy and armed robbery attacks, equivalent to a small coastal tanker being hijacked by pirates every two weeks.

The trouble, as I mentioned in my earlier piece, is that conflicting territorial claims between states in the South China Sea could present a problem. Lai himself acknowledged that this was a lingering concern.

“There is concern with the proximity to the contested claims of South China Sea, and we certainly don’t want those issues to be conflated. We are very focused on dealing with the piracy situation and none of us really benefit from letting this situation fester.”

ASEAN Joint Patrols in the South China Sea? | The Diplomat
 
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Singapore’s navy chief suggests that the idea could be realized soon.

thediplomat_2015-01-27_18-57-02-36x36.jpg

By Prashanth Parameswaran
May 12, 2015

7787_5243b7bba4e3e-386x271.jpg

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

On May 11, Singapore media outlets reported that Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia are in discussions to extend joint patrols to the lower reaches of the South China Sea to tackle piracy.

According to Singapore Chief of Navy Rear-Admiral Lai Chung Han, the states were hoping to start the patrols “sooner rather than later,” and Singapore is “more than ready to move on this.”

The idea of joint patrols by Southeast Asian states in the South China Sea has been floated both privately and publicly in the past. As I have written previously, the proposal made headlines earlier this year when Vice Admiral Robert Thomas said at the Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace Exhibition following the ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting in Malaysia that ASEAN countries could streamline cooperation on maritime security while respecting sovereignty and coastal space, as was the case with counter-piracy efforts in the Gulf of Aden.

As I suggested then and as Lai outlined, such patrols by Southeast Asian states in the South China Sea would be an extension of the Malacca Strait Patrols (MSP) undertaken by Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand. The MSP, which began in 2004, is a set of cooperative measures that includes air and sea patrols between these countries to tackle piracy.

Extending those patrols to the South China Sea would seem to make sense. Piracy is a rampant problem around Southeast Asian waters, which carry about half of world trade and a third of its oil supply. By some accounts, the problem may be getting worse. As I reported earlier, according to the International Maritime Bureau (IMB), Southeast Asia saw 141 piracy incidents in 2014, up from 126 in 2013. And for the first quarter of 2015, the IMB found that the region alone accounted for over half of the world’s piracy and armed robbery attacks, equivalent to a small coastal tanker being hijacked by pirates every two weeks.

The trouble, as I mentioned in my earlier piece, is that conflicting territorial claims between states in the South China Sea could present a problem. Lai himself acknowledged that this was a lingering concern.

“There is concern with the proximity to the contested claims of South China Sea, and we certainly don’t want those issues to be conflated. We are very focused on dealing with the piracy situation and none of us really benefit from letting this situation fester.”

ASEAN Joint Patrols in the South China Sea? | The Diplomat
China will welcome to join these expedite and fully support against the fight against piracy.
 
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Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore can patrol south part of SCS together, while China, vietnam and phillipine can patrol the north part of SCS together. Sounds good. Win win.

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So much of our trade passes through the SCS, and it is increasingly at risk both from pirates, which include non-state actors but also some expansionist state actors who look to encroach on our territory and threaten our freedom of navigation. So if Malaysia/Singapore/Indonesia are willing to offer us (and other countries with a vested interest in uninterrupted Asian trade) this public service, we would be very grateful.

Hopefully, Indonesia will unglove the same firm hand it used to blow up invading fishing boats.
 
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US navy has began patrolled in SCS soon.

USS Forth Worth warship in SCS.
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Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore can patrol south part of SCS together, while China, vietnam and phillipine can patrol the north part of SCS together. Sounds good. Win win.

View attachment 221376

China wont like that plan.
So does Malaysia

"Double Faster" :omghaha: Me am "double amused" :sarcastic:

Seriously though the 54 carry bigger guns to compensate.

Is it a shooting game? LOL
Unarmed couple of B-52 played the same game in 2013 in ECS

When LCS full armed, 054A isn't the competitor.
 
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China wont like that plan. So does Malaysia

But that's the plan, atleast for the south part. We will leave the north part for CN, VN and PH to figure out themselves how to make that work.
 
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Is it a shooting game? LOL
Unarmed couple of B-52 played the same game in 2013 in ECS

When LCS full armed, 054A isn't the competitor.

She is designed for a variety of missions in shallow waters, capable against submarines, small ships, minesweeping and humanitarian relief but not designed to take on large Warships. The ship is a semi-planing monohull design capable of over 40 knots (74 km/h; 46 mph). (source)

Not discounting the LCS, but two ship are just built for a different task.
 
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She is designed for a variety of missions in shallow waters, capable against submarines, small ships, minesweeping and humanitarian relief but not designed to take on large Warships. The ship is a semi-planing monohull design capable of over 40 knots (74 km/h; 46 mph). (source)

Not discounting the LCS, but two ship are just built for a different task.

LCS currently spare 60% room for multipurpose conversion.
I will not make sure as yours.
Stealth cross section isn't there for patrol mission

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As you know NSM tested on LCS
9dbnQ1I.jpg
 
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Stealth section reduce radar range of detect LCS.
LCS can fight small countries with limited radar and attacking capacity..
But of course not against bigger warships

LCS currently spare 60% room for multipurpose conversion.
I will not make sure as yours.
Stealth cross section isn't there for patrol mission

View attachment 221379
 
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Stealth section reduce radar range of detect LCS.
LCS can fight small countries with limited radar and attacking capacity..
But of course not against bigger warships

NSM has the range 185km, it's good.
 
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