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Latgab or Joint Exercise 2014 pictures update

Inspection of Army Kostrad Units mainly Paratroopers by Lodewijk F. Paulus (made me remember his parents must be fans of the late Paulus from NAZI Germany hehehe)
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Marines Corps in Surabaya

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credit to Kenyot10 at Kaskus.co.id
 
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LIPI to deploy special ships for deep-sea research


Ambon, Maluku (ANTARA News) - The Indonesian Institute of Science (LIPI) will use research vessels equipped with multibeam echosounders capable of reaching a depth of six thousand meters for exploring the eastern Indonesian waters.

The research vessels also had oceanographic technologies to measure temperature, salinity, and chemical parameters at a minimal depth of five thousand meters, Augy Syagalaitua, the head of LIPIs Ambon Marine Biota Conservation Office, noted here on Wednesday.

The price of one well-equipped research vessel is about Rp250 billion, he remarked.

Long-range research cruises were needed because many Exclusive Economic Zone (ZEE) locations were not yet studied or explored, he added.

"We will also prepare the necessary human resources for the ZEE research for the next 10 to 20 years," he affirmed.

LIPI Chairman Lukman Hakim earlier stated that his institute needed more research vessels for sophisticated deep-sea research, following the status upgrade of the Ambon Marine Biota Conservation Office to LIPIs Deep-sea Research Center.

Indonesia needed to build research vessels of international standards, he reiterated.

According to Chairman of the LIPIs Oceanographic Research Center Zainal Arifin, such sophisticated research vessels should be available within the next five years.

Currently, LIPI has two modern research vessels: Baruna Jaya VII built by the Indonesian ship building manufacturer, PT PAL and Baruna Jaya VIII made in Norway.

LIPI to deploy special ships for deep-sea research - ANTARA News

Indonesia Gears Up For Research In Unexplored Deep Sea - ANTARA News
 
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China’s Advance Spurs Indonesian Military Shift: Southeast Asia

By Berni Moestafa and Sharon Chen
May 29, 2014 12:00 AM GMT+0700

iRTpmCumfBm0.jpg

Photographer: Ardiles Rante/Bloomberg.
Indonesian navy commandos guard a beach in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia during an economic summit.


China’s intensifying move to assert claims over the South China Sea has given fresh impetus to a military buildup in Indonesia that will see its forces deployed with greater focus on external risks.

After years of concentrating on separatist threats across an archipelago long enough to stretch from New York to Alaska, Indonesia plans to deploy attack helicopters to its islands at the southern end of the South China Sea and expand its naval power. The front-runner for July’s presidential election, Joko Widodo, aims to boost defense spending to 1.5 percent as a share of the economy, which is Southeast Asia’s largest.

The strategy shift comes as China escalates disputes with the Philippines and Vietnam, fellow members of the Association of Southeast Asean Nations. China’s standoff with Vietnam over an oil rig this month followed its 2012 success in taking control of the Scarborough Shoal from the Philippines.

“The focus in defense spending is moving to dealing with external threats,” said Tim Huxley, executive director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in Singapore. “There is a concern from an Indonesian perspective that the South China Sea should not become a Chinese lake and that freedom of shipping should be maintained.” That is influencing Indonesia’s defense spending and procurement, he said.

The military is about 40 percent of the way to developing a minimum-essential force, or MEF, by 2029, to guard its territory as it adds tanks, submarines, helicopters and jet fighters to its arsenal, Deputy Defense Minister Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin said in an interview in Jakarta. Under the MEF, the government is seeking to acquire 274 Navy ships, 10 fighter squadrons and 12 new diesel-electric submarines.

“We’re part of maintaining regional stability and peace and to maintain that we must certainly have powers that support that regional strength,” Sjamsoeddin said.

China’s Map


Indonesia has sought to stay out of its neighbors’ spats with China over the South China Sea, and is not an official claimant to areas in dispute. But in recent months it has said that China’s interpretation of its nine dash-line map -- the basis for its territorial claims -- is seeping into Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone.

Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said in an interview in April that he wanted an explanation of China’s map and asked the United Nations to help obtain clarity.

Commodore Fahru Zaini, assistant deputy to the chief security minister for defense strategic doctrine, said in March that China’s map included an “arbitrary claim” to waters off the Natuna Islands in the Indonesian province of Riau. “This dispute will have a large impact on the security of Natuna waters,” he said, according to Antara News.

17,000 Islands

Indonesia has some 17,000 islands to police, stretched across 5,300 kilometers (3,293 miles) from east to west. The Malacca Strait that Indonesia shares with Malaysia is a key shipping lane that links the economies of countries such as India, China and Japan.

“It’s the largest country in Southeast Asia and they want to play what they think is a corresponding role,” Richard Bitzinger, senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore, said. “You’re not going to get that unless you develop a sizable, modern military, because at this point the military is pretty small potatoes.”

Military spending increased to 81.96 trillion rupiah ($7.1 billion) in 2013 from 72.94 trillion rupiah in 2012, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

‘Balanced Force’

China’s defense budget will rise 12.2 percent this year to 808.2 billion yuan ($129 billion). President Xi Jinping has made a navy with longer reach a priority to boost China’s claims in the South China Sea and East China Sea.

Despite being a maritime country, Indonesia seeks to build a “balanced force” between the army, the navy and the air force, Sjamsoeddin said in the March interview, as “eventually all battles end on land.” Indonesia, which is also spending on tanks, faced decades of internal discord in East Timor, an independent nation since 2002.

Indonesia isn’t in an arms race and spends less than 1 percent of gross domestic product on defense, compared with 3 percent to 4 percent among other Asean nations, Sjamsoeddin said. If countries in the region have heavy tanks then Indonesia should have heavy tanks, said Sjamsoeddin, 61, adding some military equipment in use is older than he is.

Natuna Islands

Indonesia will deploy four Boeing Apache attack helicopters to the Natuna Islands, IHS Jane’s reported on its website in March, citing General Budiman, the army’s chief of staff, as a pre-emptive measure against instability in the South China Sea.

With China more assertive in the southern part of the South China Sea, “the Indonesian armed forces are strengthening their military presence on the Natuna Islands, and that includes preparing facilities on the Natuna Islands to accommodate jet fighters,” said Ian Storey, senior fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore.

How far Indonesia pushes back against China may depend on the presidential election, with neither candidate detailing foreign policy goals so far. Widodo, who will face off against a former general, Prabowo Subianto, pledged to boost defense spending to 1.5 percent of GDP within five years, according to his policy paper. Spending is now 0.9 percent of GDP, according to Sipri.

“There seems to be a commitment to increasing defense spending, increasing Indonesia’s overall military strength, more in accordance to what they see is a normal, large power in the region,” Bitzinger said. “They’re increasingly interested too in being able to be a modern military, to project power.”

China’s Advance Spurs Indonesian Military Shift: Southeast Asia - Bloomberg
 
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Inspection of Army Kostrad Units mainly Paratroopers by Lodewijk F. Paulus (made me remember his parents must be fans of the late Paulus from NAZI Germany hehehe)
Even his parents cannot chose that name because Paulus is family name from Minahasa, North Sulawesi.
 
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China’s Advance Spurs Indonesian Military Shift: Southeast Asia
By Berni Moestafa and Sharon Chen
May 29, 2014 12:00 AM GMT+0700

iRTpmCumfBm0.jpg

Photographer: Ardiles Rante/Bloomberg.
Indonesian navy commandos guard a beach in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia during an economic summit.


China’s intensifying move to assert claims over the South China Sea has given fresh impetus to a military buildup in Indonesia that will see its forces deployed with greater focus on external risks.

After years of concentrating on separatist threats across an archipelago long enough to stretch from New York to Alaska, Indonesia plans to deploy attack helicopters to its islands at the southern end of the South China Sea and expand its naval power. The front-runner for July’s presidential election, Joko Widodo, aims to boost defense spending to 1.5 percent as a share of the economy, which is Southeast Asia’s largest.

The strategy shift comes as China escalates disputes with the Philippines and Vietnam, fellow members of the Association of Southeast Asean Nations. China’s standoff with Vietnam over an oil rig this month followed its 2012 success in taking control of the Scarborough Shoal from the Philippines.

“The focus in defense spending is moving to dealing with external threats,” said Tim Huxley, executive director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in Singapore. “There is a concern from an Indonesian perspective that the South China Sea should not become a Chinese lake and that freedom of shipping should be maintained.” That is influencing Indonesia’s defense spending and procurement, he said.

The military is about 40 percent of the way to developing a minimum-essential force, or MEF, by 2029, to guard its territory as it adds tanks, submarines, helicopters and jet fighters to its arsenal, Deputy Defense Minister Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin said in an interview in Jakarta. Under the MEF, the government is seeking to acquire 274 Navy ships, 10 fighter squadrons and 12 new diesel-electric submarines.

“We’re part of maintaining regional stability and peace and to maintain that we must certainly have powers that support that regional strength,” Sjamsoeddin said.
China’s Map

Indonesia has sought to stay out of its neighbors’ spats with China over the South China Sea, and is not an official claimant to areas in dispute. But in recent months it has said that China’s interpretation of its nine dash-line map -- the basis for its territorial claims -- is seeping into Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone.

Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said in an interview in April that he wanted an explanation of China’s map and asked the United Nations to help obtain clarity.

Commodore Fahru Zaini, assistant deputy to the chief security minister for defense strategic doctrine, said in March that China’s map included an “arbitrary claim” to waters off the Natuna Islands in the Indonesian province of Riau. “This dispute will have a large impact on the security of Natuna waters,” he said, according to Antara News.

17,000 Islands

Indonesia has some 17,000 islands to police, stretched across 5,300 kilometers (3,293 miles) from east to west. The Malacca Strait that Indonesia shares with Malaysia is a key shipping lane that links the economies of countries such as India, China and Japan.

“It’s the largest country in Southeast Asia and they want to play what they think is a corresponding role,” Richard Bitzinger, senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore, said. “You’re not going to get that unless you develop a sizable, modern military, because at this point the military is pretty small potatoes.”

Military spending increased to 81.96 trillion rupiah ($7.1 billion) in 2013 from 72.94 trillion rupiah in 2012, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

‘Balanced Force’

China’s defense budget will rise 12.2 percent this year to 808.2 billion yuan ($129 billion). President Xi Jinping has made a navy with longer reach a priority to boost China’s claims in the South China Sea and East China Sea.

Despite being a maritime country, Indonesia seeks to build a “balanced force” between the army, the navy and the air force, Sjamsoeddin said in the March interview, as “eventually all battles end on land.” Indonesia, which is also spending on tanks, faced decades of internal discord in East Timor, an independent nation since 2002.

Indonesia isn’t in an arms race and spends less than 1 percent of gross domestic product on defense, compared with 3 percent to 4 percent among other Asean nations, Sjamsoeddin said. If countries in the region have heavy tanks then Indonesia should have heavy tanks, said Sjamsoeddin, 61, adding some military equipment in use is older than he is.

Natuna Islands

Indonesia will deploy four Boeing Apache attack helicopters to the Natuna Islands, IHS Jane’s reported on its website in March, citing General Budiman, the army’s chief of staff, as a pre-emptive measure against instability in the South China Sea.

With China more assertive in the southern part of the South China Sea, “the Indonesian armed forces are strengthening their military presence on the Natuna Islands, and that includes preparing facilities on the Natuna Islands to accommodate jet fighters,” said Ian Storey, senior fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore.

How far Indonesia pushes back against China may depend on the presidential election, with neither candidate detailing foreign policy goals so far. Widodo, who will face off against a former general, Prabowo Subianto, pledged to boost defense spending to 1.5 percent of GDP within five years, according to his policy paper. Spending is now 0.9 percent of GDP, according to Sipri.

“There seems to be a commitment to increasing defense spending, increasing Indonesia’s overall military strength, more in accordance to what they see is a normal, large power in the region,” Bitzinger said. “They’re increasingly interested too in being able to be a modern military, to project power.”

China’s Advance Spurs Indonesian Military Shift: Southeast Asia - Bloomberg[/quote]
Your defense budget is only 1.29 Billion dollars man that sucks we with really bad economy have around 7 Billion dollars defense budget
 
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o 81.96 trillion rupiah ($7.1 billion) in 2013 from 72.94 trillion rupiah in 2012, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

from where your number is coming from?
 
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Video footage from 330th "Kujang" Airborne Battalion conducting battalion level paratroops jump training

Battalion profile video : Mechanized Battalion 202 "Tajimalela"

Battalion profile video : Mechanized Battalion 201 "Jaya Yudha"

Battalion profile video : 900th Infantry Battalion "Raiders" Bali
Yonif 900 Raider [director's cut] [trailer] - YouTube

BAE Hawk Squadron Marshalling Video "Dayak Tribe Style"
BAE Hawk Marshalling Indonesian Air Force - TNI AU .mp4 - YouTube

BAE Hawk Squadron Marshalling Video "Funny Dance"
BAE Hawk Marshalling Indonesian Air Force-TNI AU part 2.mp4 - YouTube
 
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The threat that we should deal currently is any multinationals company who can steal our money and energy freely, and then export our energy to their country while we badly need money for building infrastructure and also need cheep energy for our industry (just like our gas). I am glad that we have KPK and many good Anti-Corruption NGO like ICW. But we need more honest, powerful and intellectual civilians that dares to fight those bullshit people that steal our money and energy in a day light by paying money to Indonesian traitors. Just watch Mahakam Block Now......

I just cant understand why we cannot measure the flow of oil from a multinational oil and gas company. (I forget whether BPK report mention to all of oil and gas company)...the tools thats supposed to instal there is not working said Vice Chairman BPK some times ago in Jakarta Lawyers Club....So we just believe what that company said...?????
 
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Indonesian Paskhas (Air Force Commando) Bravo 90 showing closed combat accuracy in cross-firing demonstration with live ammunition.
 
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so each vessel will be carrying 2 different type of AShM?

Nope, it was a misquotes
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Jane's : PT PAL delivers first KCR-60 guided missile FAC, launches second
Ridzwan Rahmat, Singapore - IHS Jane's Navy International
28 May 2014
Indonesian state-owned shipbuilder PT PAL delivered the first of three KCR-60-class guided missile fast attack craft to the Indonesian Navy (Tentera Nasional Indonesia - Angkatan Laut: TNI-AL) on 28 May.

The handing over ceremony for the vessel, KRI Sampari , was presided over by Indonesian Defence Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro who described its delivery as an important step towards securing the country's vast territorial waters.

The KCR-60-class can carry either four C-705 or C-802 anti-ship missiles in two twin launchers and is fitted with a 57 mm gun on the foredeck and two 20 mm guns amidships. The 59.8 m vessel is powered by two 2,880 kW engines and can attain a top speed of 28 kt.

PT PAL delivers first KCR-60 guided missile FAC, launches second - IHS Jane's 360
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Indonesia’s DI Eyes Bright Skies With Airbus
By Tito Summa Siahaan on 07:45 pm May 29, 2014


An Airbus A400M landing at Halim Perdana Kusuma Airport in Jakarta, in this 2012 file photo. (JG Photo / Afriadi Hikmal)

Jakarta. Budi Santoso, president director of Dirgantara Indonesia, has said the Bandung-based aircraft manufacturer’s future lies within its partnership with Airbus, the European giant of the skies.

In an interview with the Jakarta Globe in his Bandung office on Wednesday, Budi announced that Dirgantara Indonesia is pushing ahead with a joint venture with its long-time partner, Airbus.

“I hope to see Airbus Indonesia next year,” he added.

Dirgantara Indonesia’s partnership with Toulouse-based Airbus dates back to the 1970s, when the former acquired a licence to manufacture the light helicopter NBO-105. The local company has produced a total of 120 of the helicopters to date.

Additionally, the aircraft manufacturer also produces components and parts for several Airbus aircraft models.

The global aircraft industry is dominated by Airbus and its American rival, Boeing, and Budi noted “there are few places you can go in the industry without partnering with either Airbus or Boeing.”

Budi said such a partnership will build trust and confidence from consumers as well as improve Dirgantara Indonesia’s technological capabilities.

“We can build an aircraft under our own design or brand, but will people trust us enough to buy it?” he said, acknowledging the fact his company still lacks the capability to develop software and electronics equipment installed in modern aircraft.

“Our engineers are very qualified in the field of aeronautics, but we still have to learn a lot more in terms of developing the brain of an aircraft,” he said, adding that Dirgantara Indonesia wants its future to run a similar course to that of China’s leading computer manufacturer, and the company’s “best example,” Lenovo.

Beijing-based Lenovo started out as a local manufacturer for American IBM up until the former acquired the latter’s personal computer business in 2005. Today, Lenovo is the world’s largest producer of personal computers.

Budi said Dirgantara Indonesia is currently in the process of undergoing stages of rejuvenation.

“The size of our workforce will be bloated for the next three years because we are asking our ageing engineers to stay and teach the younger ones.”

Dirgantara Indonesia does not have plans to expand its current facilities, but the company plans to purchase new equipment that would double or triple its production capacity, according to Budi.

The 38-year-old manufacturer incurred losses for years after the International Monetary Fund asked the Indonesian government to abandon the expensive program as part of their requirement for a bailout in the aftermath of the 1998 Asian financial crisis.

After a series of capital injections by the government, totalling Rp 1.4 trillion ($120.4 million) in 2012, Dirgantara Indonesia began seeing profit, booking net income of Rp 10 billion last year.

The company has also started to regain trust from the country’s lenders to acquire funding, having received “a credit line from local banks of around Rp 4 trillion,” Budi said, adding that what the company needs most at the moment is to stay productive.

“We need projects to keep our engineers busy.”

Dirgantara Indonesia has several projects under its wings, including a joint venture with South Korea in developing the KF-X/IF-X jet fighter, which is expected to boost the company’s technological know-how, according to Budi.

Indonesia's DI Eyes Bright Skies With Airbus | The Jakarta Globe
 
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SMH_NEW_LARGER.jpg


Indonesia flags military build-up to protect presence in South China Sea
May 30, 2014 - 8:57AM - 30 reading now
Berni Moestafa and Sharon Chen

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Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa wants an explanation of China's claim on the entire South China Sea.

Jakarta, Indonesia: China's intensifying move to assert claims over the South China Sea has given fresh impetus to a military build-up in Indonesia that will see its forces deployed with greater focus on external risks.

After years of concentrating on separatist threats across an archipelago long enough to stretch from New York to Alaska, Indonesia plans to deploy attack helicopters to its islands at the southern end of the South China Sea and expand its naval power. The front-runner for July's presidential election, Joko Widodo, aims to boost defence spending to 1.5 per cent as a share of the economy, which is south-east Asia's largest.

The strategy shift comes as China escalates disputes with the Philippines and Vietnam, fellow members of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN). China's standoff with Vietnam over an oil rig this month followed its 2012 success in taking control of the Scarborough Shoal from the Philippines.

"The focus in defence spending is moving to dealing with external threats," said Tim Huxley, executive director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in Singapore. "There is a concern from an Indonesian perspective that the South China Sea should not become a Chinese lake and that freedom of shipping should be maintained." That is influencing Indonesia's defence spending and procurement, he said.

The military is about 40 per cent of the way to developing a minimum-essential force, or MEF, by 2029, to guard its territory as it adds tanks, submarines, helicopters and jet fighters to its arsenal, Deputy Defence Minister Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin said in an interview in Jakarta. Under the MEF, the government is seeking to acquire 274 navy ships, 10 fighter squadrons and 12 new diesel-electric submarines.

"We're part of maintaining regional stability and peace and to maintain that we must certainly have powers that support that regional strength," Mr Sjamsoeddin said.

Indonesia has sought to stay out of its neighbours' spats with China over the South China Sea, and is not an official claimant to areas in dispute. But in recent months it has said that China's interpretation of its nine dash-line map -- the basis for its territorial claims -- is seeping into Indonesia's exclusive economic zone.

Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said in an interview in April that he wanted an explanation of China's map and asked the United Nations to help obtain clarity.

Commodore Fahru Zaini, assistant deputy to the chief security minister for defence strategic doctrine, said in March that China's map included an "arbitrary claim" to waters off the Natuna Islands in the Indonesian province of Riau. "This dispute will have a large impact on the security of Natuna waters," he said, according to Antara News.

Indonesia has 17,000 islands to police, stretched across 5300 kilometres from east to west. The Malacca Strait that Indonesia shares with Malaysia is a key shipping lane that links the economies of countries such as India, China and Japan.

"It's the largest country in south-east Asia and they want to play what they think is a corresponding role," Richard Bitzinger, senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore, said. "You're not going to get that unless you develop a sizeable, modern military, because at this point the military is pretty small potatoes."

Military spending increased to 81.96 trillion rupiah ($7.7 billion) in 2013 from 72.94 trillion rupiah in 2012, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

China's defence budget will rise 12.2 per cent this year to 808.2 billion yuan ($141 billion). President Xi Jinping has made a navy with longer reach a priority to boost China's claims in the South China Sea and East China Sea.

Despite being a maritime country, Indonesia seeks to build a "balanced force" between the army, the navy and the air force, Mr Sjamsoeddin said in the March interview, as "eventually all battles end on land." Indonesia, which is also spending on tanks, faced decades of internal discord in East Timor, an independent nation since 2002.

Indonesia isn't in an arms race and spends less than 1 per cent of gross domestic product on defence, compared with 3 per cent to 4 per cent among other ASEAN nations, Mr Sjamsoeddin said. If countries in the region have heavy tanks then Indonesia should have heavy tanks, said Mr Sjamsoeddin, 61, adding some military equipment in use is older than he is.

Indonesia will deploy four Boeing Apache attack helicopters to the Natuna Islands, IHS Jane's reported on its website in March, citing General Budiman, the army's chief of staff, as a pre-emptive measure against instability in the South China Sea.

With China more assertive in the southern part of the South China Sea, "the Indonesian armed forces are strengthening their military presence on the Natuna Islands, and that includes preparing facilities on the Natuna Islands to accommodate jet fighters," said Ian Storey, senior fellow at the Institute of South-east Asian Studies in Singapore.

"During the first decade of this century they were focused on combating internal threats, that is separatism and terrorism," Dr Storey said. "But they've been largely successful in containing those threats and I think now they're focusing more outwards, focusing on external threats."

How far Indonesia pushes back against China may depend on the presidential election, with neither candidate detailing foreign policy goals so far. Mr Widodo, who will face off against a former general, Prabowo Subianto, pledged to boost defence spending to 1.5 per cent of GDP within five years, according to his policy paper. Spending is now 0.9 per cent of GDP, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute .

"There seems to be a commitment to increasing defence spending, increasing Indonesia's overall military strength, more in accordance to what they see is a normal, large power in the region," Mr Bitzinger said. "They're increasingly interested too in being able to be a modern military, to project power."


Read more: Indonesia flags military build-up to protect presence in South China Sea
 
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7th Fleet, Indonesian Navy Leaders Share Knowledge On board USS Blue Ridge
Story Number: NNS140529-03Release Date: 5/29/2014 7:26:00 AM A A A
From U.S. 7th Fleet Public Affairs

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JAKARTA, Indonesia (NNS) -- Senior leaders from the U.S. 7th Fleet and Indonesian Navies met for a professional exchange of ideas in a variety of technical and tactical topics on board the 7th Fleet flagship USS Blue Ridge (LCC 19) March 26.

The meetings, or "staff talks," included professional dialogue between the leadership of the two staffs and are designed to share knowledge and develop methodologies for joint responses to any contingency within Indo-Asia-Pacific. The exchange included discussion of maritime patrol and reconnaissance, maritime domain awareness, mine warfare, navigation, engineering and medical training.

In addition to knowledge sharing, the Indonesia navy, known as the TNI-AL, and U.S. 7th Fleet participate in Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training and other multilateral military exercises such as Komodo. Both exercises serve as models of how Indonesia and U.S. navies can cooperate and work together to address shared security concerns. Examples include humanitarian assistance and disaster relief events, maritime security and improving communication procedures.

"It is an honor for USS Blue Ridge to visit Indonesia," said Cmdr. Dwiyana, an Indonesian officer. "This staff talk will further the understanding and partnership between Indonesia and the 7th fleet."

The U.S. 7th Fleet intent for the staff talks is to increase cooperation and interoperability through the facilitation of bilateral and multilateral military exchanges and dialogue. It provides a forum partnered navies' subject matter experts to meet and discuss different aspects of their mission objectives and their responsibilities.

"The goal of staff talks is to have an open discussion with our counter parts from other countries in an effort to strengthen the partnership and cooperation between our navies," said Lt. Kevin Zweirko, 7th Fleet's Indonesian desk officer. "The staff talks went very well with Indonesia, certainly helping in this effort and as always it was good to see our partners face to face and build professional friendships."

Blue Ridge and embarked staff are in Indonesia for a scheduled port visit during a spring patrol operating forward throughout the South China Sea, building maritime partnerships and conducting security and stability operations.

7th Fleet, Indonesian Navy Leaders Share Knowledge On board USS Blue Ridge
 
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Pacific Partnership Kicks Off with Ceremony in Indonesia

By MC2 Derek Stroop
Posted May 27, 2014

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An Indonesian dance group performs a traditional dance during the opening ceremony for Pacific Partnership 2014 in Kupang, Indonesia, May 26. (U.S. Navy/MC2 Derek Stroop)

KUPANG, Indonesia - Service members from Singapore, New Zealand, Indonesia and the United States along with members of the humanitarian community attended an opening ceremony here hosted by the Indonesian armed Forces (TNI) to officially commence Pacific Partnership 2014, May 26.

In its ninth iteration, Pacific Partnership is the largest annual multilateral humanitarian assistance and disaster relief preparedness mission conducted in the Indo-Asia-Pacific. Country participants include representatives from Singapore, New Zealand, Indonesia, the United States, Timor Leste, Cambodia, Japan, Australia, and Philippines.

The ceremony began with representatives to include the U.S. and New Zealand arriving to the music of the TNI 7th Primary Naval Base band. The joint forces marched on the parade grounds together, followed by an official review of troops by TNI Surgeon General Maj. Gen. Daniel Tjen.

"It was a great experience marching with the different military participants," said Chief Hospital Corpsman Fredrico Calaguas, a San Diego native assigned to Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton. "It is interesting how differently they march, salute and call commands here, but at the same time, our salutes, marching and commands are different to them."

The New Zealanders had a similar experience.

"It was a blast being able to march with all the participants' side-by-side," said Christina Perro, a dental assistant and Kohukohu, New Zealand, native.

Capt. Rodney M. Moore, commodore of the 30th Naval Construction Regiment and mission commander for the Indonesia and Timor-Leste phases of Pacific Partnership, and Tjen delivered remarks, officially commencing Pacific Partnership 2014.

"We are all building strong bonds that will endure time and improve our ability to work together in times of need," said Moore. "Multilateral missions like Pacific Partnership are based on common goals, goals that provide a unique benefit to the security of participating nations by increasing regional stability."

Tjen and Moore then signed a stone, symbolizing peace and cooperation among forces. Plans for the stone are that at each engineering site it will be replicated and represent where partner nations and the humanitarian community worked together to complete projects.

"I am so proud to be participating in this joint partnership between nations," said TNI Capt. Tony Tatangung, an operations officer for the Indonesian navy. "This exercise will allow us to increase our capabilities and enrich our resources should a disaster arise."

The ceremony wrapped up with service members from all participating nations joining together in traditional dances from the island of Nusa Tenggara Timur, followed by a reception and press conference.

"The best part of the ceremony was definitely the dancing," said U.S. Army Capt. Mario Ponsell, a Warner-Robbins, Ga., native and civil affairs team leader assigned to the 85th Civil Affairs Brigade.

"I thought it was a great way to integrate each nation represented here together to enjoy a good bit of fun and learn about Indonesian culture," said Ponsell.

This year, Pacific Partnership features simultaneous seaborne and airborne phases with the airborne phase focused on the nations of Indonesia and Timor-Leste, both located on Nusa Tenggara Timur. Medical and engineering personnel will conduct numerous medical, dental and veterinary engagements, along with engineering civil action projects. The seaborne phase is a Japanese-led mission and is scheduled to visit Vietnam, Cambodia and the Philippines.

Pacific Partnership Kicks Off with Ceremony in Indonesia | Commander, U.S. Pacific Fleet
 
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