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Malabar 2017: India kicks off naval exercise with US, Japan
CHENNAI: Amidst concern raised by China, navies of India, US and the Japan Maritime Self-Defence Force on Monday began Malabar naval exercise 2017, aimed at achieving deeper military ties between the three nations.
It is the 21st edition of the Malabar exercise.
US and Japanese ships at Chennai Port to take part in Malabar 2017 (TOI photo by L R Skankar)
HCS Bisht, flag officer commanding-in-chief, Eastern Naval Command, declared the exercise open. He said, "The exercise indicated a joint attempt to address common challenges and shared threat."
However, he refused to commit that choice of ships and the venue of exercise had anything to do with presence of Chinese ships or threat in the Bay of Bengal and the Indian Ocean region.
Rear Admiral William D Byrne, Commander, US Strike Group 11, said the only strategic message that was being sent to all navies is that "we are better together and eliminate possibilities of miscalculations." He was responding to repeated questions of how China would view this joint exercise.
Sixteen ships, 95 aircraft and two submarines take part in the exercise that will go on till July 17.
The Malabar exercise is taking place amid the military stand-off between armies of India and China in the Sikkim section and Beijing ramping up its naval patrol in the Indian Ocean region.
China has stepped up its activities in the Indian Ocean in recent years, building ports in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Pakistan.
The maritime exercises come weeks after US President Donald Trump declared that ties between Washington and New Delhi had "never been stronger" as he held his first talks with India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Beijing already claims large swathes of the resource-rich South China Sea and East China Sea, putting it in competition with Japan and other countries in the region.
It is the fourth consecutive year Japan's Maritime Self-Defence Force (MSDF) has taken part in the Malabar Exercise, conducted annually by the US and India in the Bay of Bengal since 1992.
In a statement, the US said the exercises had "grown in scope and complexity over the years to address the variety of shared threats to maritime security in the Indo-Asia Pacific".
(With inputs from agencies)
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ss-common-challenges/articleshow/59524855.cms
The 21st edition of the exercise, conducted ashore and at-sea, would include professional exchanges on carrier strike group operations, maritime patrol and reconnaissance operations, surface and anti-submarine warfare.
Vice Admiral Joseph P Aucoin Commander meets Admiral Sunil Lanba as Malabar 2017 kicks off. (Source: twitter/indian navy)
Japanese helicopter ‘destroyer’ JS Izumo and destroyer JS Sazanami during drills. (Source: twitter/indian navy)
CHENNAI: Amidst concern raised by China, navies of India, US and the Japan Maritime Self-Defence Force on Monday began Malabar naval exercise 2017, aimed at achieving deeper military ties between the three nations.
It is the 21st edition of the Malabar exercise.
US and Japanese ships at Chennai Port to take part in Malabar 2017 (TOI photo by L R Skankar)
Highlights
- India today kicked off Malabar 2017 exercise with US and Japan.
- The exercise comes amid India-China stand-off in Sikkim sector.
- The Malabar exercise will go on till July 17.
HCS Bisht, flag officer commanding-in-chief, Eastern Naval Command, declared the exercise open. He said, "The exercise indicated a joint attempt to address common challenges and shared threat."
However, he refused to commit that choice of ships and the venue of exercise had anything to do with presence of Chinese ships or threat in the Bay of Bengal and the Indian Ocean region.
Rear Admiral William D Byrne, Commander, US Strike Group 11, said the only strategic message that was being sent to all navies is that "we are better together and eliminate possibilities of miscalculations." He was responding to repeated questions of how China would view this joint exercise.
Sixteen ships, 95 aircraft and two submarines take part in the exercise that will go on till July 17.
The Malabar exercise is taking place amid the military stand-off between armies of India and China in the Sikkim section and Beijing ramping up its naval patrol in the Indian Ocean region.
China has stepped up its activities in the Indian Ocean in recent years, building ports in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Pakistan.
The maritime exercises come weeks after US President Donald Trump declared that ties between Washington and New Delhi had "never been stronger" as he held his first talks with India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Beijing already claims large swathes of the resource-rich South China Sea and East China Sea, putting it in competition with Japan and other countries in the region.
It is the fourth consecutive year Japan's Maritime Self-Defence Force (MSDF) has taken part in the Malabar Exercise, conducted annually by the US and India in the Bay of Bengal since 1992.
In a statement, the US said the exercises had "grown in scope and complexity over the years to address the variety of shared threats to maritime security in the Indo-Asia Pacific".
(With inputs from agencies)
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ss-common-challenges/articleshow/59524855.cms
Taking part in the trilateral naval exercise in the Bay of Bengal would be US Ship Nimitz (CVN68), guided missile cruise USS Princeton (CG59), guided missile destroyers USS Howard (DDG83), USS Shoup (DDG86) and USS Kidd (DDG100), a Poseidon P-8A aircraft as well as a Los Angeles fast-attack submarine. Besides, Japan Maritime Self Defence Force ships JS Izumo (DDH 183), JS Sazanami (DD1 13) along with Indian Naval Ship Jalashwa and INS Vikramaditya would participate in the joint Naval exercise
The 21st edition of the exercise, conducted ashore and at-sea, would include professional exchanges on carrier strike group operations, maritime patrol and reconnaissance operations, surface and anti-submarine warfare.
Vice Admiral Joseph P Aucoin Commander meets Admiral Sunil Lanba as Malabar 2017 kicks off. (Source: twitter/indian navy)
Japanese helicopter ‘destroyer’ JS Izumo and destroyer JS Sazanami during drills. (Source: twitter/indian navy)
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