South China Sea Strategies for other nations (Not China)

SamuraiBlue

Captain
Japan, Indonesia to cooperate on maritime security
Japan and Indonesia agreed Wednesday to cooperate on maritime security at a time when both countries are embroiled in sea rows with China.

Beijing asserts sovereignty over almost all of the resource-rich South China Sea, despite rival claims from Southeast Asian neighbours.

Indonesia has no dispute with China over ownership of reefs or islets.

But China’s expansive claims overlap with Indonesia's exclusive economic zone -- waters where a state has the right to exploit resources -- around the Natunas, a remote scattering of islands with rich fishing grounds.

In June Indonesian President Joko Widodo toured the islands on a warship, in a move seen sending a strong message to Beijing to respect his country's sovereignty.

In Tokyo, Indonesia's coordinating minister for maritime affairs Luhut Panjaitan and Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida met to exchange documents to launch the cooperation framework, including in maritime security and economic development in remote islets.

"Japan highly values cooperation with Indonesia in maritime affairs," Kishida told Panjaitan...... to read more
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according to BreakingDefense
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The phone call between
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and the President of
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sent shock waves through the diplomatic community. But it is time to turn the page and include Taiwan in shaping a 21st century
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strategy for Pacific defense.

The
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has made it clear that the regime is
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, and
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U.S. interests and
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. It is reaching beyond Taiwan in its military and diplomatic strategy, using its expanded capabilities for power projection into the Pacific to reach out to the
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island chains as well as the key maritime access points to
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.

It is clear how important control of Taiwan would be it shaping a pincer strategy against Japan, Australia, and American military installations in the Pacific. Why would the United States then simply stand by and ignore the defense of Taiwan and its key place in a strategic reshaping of Pacific strategy? That would be turning the Pacific Pivot into the Pacific Divot.

There is little reason to be frozen in time with Kissinger and Nixon who sought to counterbalance the Soviet Union by embracing Communist China. Last time we looked, the Soviet Union had collapsed. Russia is not the Soviet Union: Today’s Kremlin sees no commonality of relationships with China, except and only with regard to realpolitik. As such, there is little to be gained by appeasing the PRC in hopes of containing Russia.
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is a task all unto itself, as it forges a 21st century approach to power, using its military capabilities to shape outcomes seen as essential to Russian national interest by Putin. And today China is a power unto it itself, one that has departed dramatically from its place in the global system when Nixon and Kissinger negotiated the Shanghai Communiqué.

As Danny Lam, a Canadian analyst, has underscored: “Normalization of relations with the PRC was accomplished through the issuance of
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in 1972, 1979, and 1982 that defined the relationship. In those documents, the PRC and US explicitly acknowledged their differences….and made clear that the differences are only papered over temporarily for the sake of peace. Temporarily is the operative word.”

This was converted to the “one China policy” at the end of the Carter Administration, where Carter severed diplomatic relations with Taiwan and recognized the PRC as the sole legitimate government of China.. But Carter’s policy was also forged during the Cold War with what is now the non-existent Soviet Union and
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seeking to assert that power deep into the region. It is time to exit the Madame Tussaud museum of policy initiatives and shape a Taiwan policy for the 21st century, which is part of a broader deterrent strategy.

Deterrence In Depth

Both the technology available to the United States and the policy shifts of core allies in the Pacific enable a new strategy of deterrence in depth. Japan has focused on its extended defense; Australia upon the integration of its forces with a capability for the extended defense of Australia; U.S. forces on shaping a force to operate over the extended ranges of the Pacific. Now is the time for a serious rebooting of the role of Taiwan in extended Pacific defense and security.

As then-commander of Marine Corps Forces Pacific (MARFORPAC), Lt. Gen. Terry Robling, put it: “I like the term
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because that’s exactly what it is. It’s not always about defense in depth. It’s about deterring and influencing others’ behavior, so they can contribute to the region’s stability, both economically and militarily, in an environment where everyone conforms to the rule of law and international norms.”

How to implement this approach militarily? U.S. Navy leadership has pioneered the concept of building
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, which network together widely dispersed assets — ships, planes, submarines — across the extended battlespace, allowing new combinations of sensors and shooters in which “no platform fights alone.” Taiwan can be seamlessly integrated into such a deterrence strategy with the political will expressed by President-Elect Donald Trump.

In our discussions with the new Deputy Chief of Naval Operations, Rear Admiral Mike Manazir, he highlighted the key role of
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across a distributed operational area. It is clear that both the Air Force, the Navy and Marine Corps team are focused on shaping the force for the high-end fight against peer competitors.

The Army’s main contribution in such considerations is the expanding and evolving role of
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. But in so doing, the focus is upon building a modular, agile force, which can operate across the spectrum of military operations, not only in the high-end fight. It is about shaping platforms into an integrated force, which can deliver lethal and non-lethal effects throughout the battlespace.

Taiwan can enter easily into a system of distributed defense and deterrence in depth. One can start by involving them in various security efforts associated with allied coast guard forces in the region. The Taiwanese can become a regular participant as a presence force associated with allied and U.S. security operations.

Taiwan’s Air Force and Navy can engage in partnership in the evolving distributed approach to an integrated Pacific defense strategy. Against a PRC pushing out its military capability into the Pacific, if Taiwan is isolated unto itself and not part of a US-Japanese-Australian deterrence in depth force, the lonely island will become an apple for Beijing to pluck from the tree. President Elect Donald Trump’s phone call put a very powerful marker down for a new chapter in deterring the PRC.

...
... goes on in the subsequent post; source:
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continuation of the above post:
Taiwan As Cornerstone

A new Taiwan policy and indeed a new approach to Pacific islands is a key part of any new “constrainment strategy” towards China. Taiwan lies at the juncture of any effective Pacific military strategy against the PRC coming out deeper into the Pacific. The PRC has changed the nature of the game. Neither Taiwan, the United States, Japan, nor Australia should accept Chinese encroachment on freedom of the sea in the Western Pacific and South China Sea.

A PRC-dominated Taiwan would be militarily poised to disrupt US and allied operations and significantly disrupt the ability to operate in a “
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.” If the PLA (generic for all PRC military forces) is given time to dig in and build a robust redundant intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) network from survivable, hardened ground facilities with dug-in and hardened missile batteries, it would be a
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. The combination of survivable ISR 100-plus miles off the Chinese coast, linked with sea-based platforms, PLAAF attack planes, and their satellites (if they are allowed to survive) could be very deadly at sea for the US Navy and allied forces.

Enhancing the defense of Taiwan is a legitimate right of Taiwan and is permitted by the Taiwan Relations Act: “In furtherance of the policy set forth in section 3301 of this title, the United States will make available to Taiwan such defense articles and defense services in such quantity as may be necessary to enable Taiwan to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability.”

But self-defense of Taiwan against a PRC reaching deep into the Pacific cannot be done without collaboration with the US, Japan and Australia in a broader strategic effort. We can look for ways to both enhance Taiwan’s ability to defend itself and contribute to Pacific defense. One key way would for Taiwan to extend the reach of their Intelligence, Surveillance, & Reconnaissance (ISR) into the area and enhanced their Command & Control (C2).

These capabilities could evolve further as the US Army builds out its Air Defense Artillery (ADA) capability in the region. A new way to think about the ADA approach is to build the support facilities throughout the Pacific whereby
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missile defense systems and other air defense can be supported.

How can we deploy THAAD batteries to remote islands, as part of a flexible network of defensive systems? The Gross Vehicle Weight Rating (GVWR) of a truck-mounted THAAD missile launcher alone is 66,000 lbs, while the heavy lift CH-53 helicopter can take only 30,000 lbs internally or sling-load 36,000 externally (range unrefueled is 621 nautical miles). However, the actual missile battery — separated from the vehicle carrying it — is 26,000 lbs and well inside the lift capacity of a CH-53.

The problem is the mechanisms to raise and lower the launcher and rearm. A launcher (sans truck) might be lowered from the air onto reinforced concrete pads with calibrated launch points. Or, a separate modular lift device could be put in place to load and reload. Consequently, taking apart modules doesn’t appear to be a showstopper. As for deploying the crews, Marine MV-22 Opsreys flying in Army ADA troops into any reasonable terrain is absolutely no problem. (The weight of the THAAD command post and radar may be of concern, however).

To date, the Big Army has not spent much time thinking about using MV-22s and CH-53Ks, which are exclusively Marine Corps systems. But there is precedent for such operations:In the Vietnam War, the Army did it brilliantly by setting up firebases in remote areas with helo lift of very heavy guns. A THAAD island deployment concept is the same in principle but with different technology.

Now combine these deployable ADA batteries with the ability to move a floating airfield as needed, the aircraft carrier carefully staying within 200-plus kilometers of the dispersed island bases so the land-based batteries can help protect it. As the US shapes such a defensive belt, Taiwan could be plugged. At some point in the future, as the island nation develops its own Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, & Reconnaissance (C4ISR) capabilities, Taiwan could operate its own air defense artillery and contribute to the firepower of the defensive grid.

The Taiwan Relations Act clearly permits such actions: “To maintain the capacity of the United States to resist any resort to force or other forms of coercion that would jeopardize the security, or the social or economic system, of the people on Taiwan.”

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has started the process of setting in motion a new policy. History may remember when Donald Trump took a phone call from President of Taiwan as a symbolic moment embodying the same moral imperative as Ronald Reagan’s demand in Berlin to “tear down this wall.”
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one of USNI News Top Stories 2016: International Operations
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Philippines Give U.S. Exercises the Cold Shoulder

Shortly after being elected, new president of the Philippines Rodrigo Duterte made a public declaration the Philippine military
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.

“So I’m serving notice now to the Americans. I will maintain the military alliance, the RP-U.S. pact which our countries signed in the early 50s. But I will establish new alliances for trade and commerce,”
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.
“And you are scheduled to hold war games, which China does not want. I will serve notice to you now that this will be the last military exercise. Jointly, [the] Philippines, the U.S.? Last one.”

While U.S. leaders felt confident the exercises would continue unabated, in early December Marine Corps Forces Pacific confirmed the large-scale amphibious exercise PHIBLEX would be canceled. Instead, the U.S. and the Philippines would conduct drills that focus on humanitarian aid and disaster relief (HADR).

“We reached a mutually agreed upon plan for 2017, which ensures that U.S.-Philippine military training activities and engagement remain robust and substantial,” a Marine spokeswoman told
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.
As recently as Friday, reports indicate Duterte wanted to move naval drills
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.
 
I happened to post about the Admiral Tributs Tuesday at 9:27 PM
one of the Udaloys of the Pacific Fleet visiting Manila, Philippines:
C1O5q4wWgAAlFCA.jpg
(on her way back from India, it seems:
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)
and she then had a visitor :)
MzRN.jpg


(comes from the photo gallery at gazeta.ru:
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Yesterday at 9:18 PM
I happened to post about the Admiral Tributs Tuesday at 9:27 PM

and she then had a visitor :)
MzRN.jpg


(comes from the photo gallery at gazeta.ru:
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Military.com story now:
Philippines' Duterte Tours Russian Warship Amid Warming Ties
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte toured one of the two Russian warships docked in Manila on Friday in another gesture of warming ties with Moscow as he shifts his country's foreign policy away from long-time ally, the United States.

Rear Adm. Eduard Mikhailov, deputy commander of Russia's Pacific Fleet, and Russian Ambassador Igor Khovaev and escorted Duterte and several cabinet members around the anti-submarine ship Admiral Tributs.

At one point during the hourlong visit, Duterte looked out from the ship's deck and pumped his fist in the air.

He was also shown equipment and weapons on board the ship and peered from binoculars from a chair. He took a group picture with the Russians also posing in his trademark pose — with arm stretched out at chest-level and fists closed.

After signing a guest book, he said "Friends, long live!" He added: "That's from the heart; I hope you can come back more often."

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and deployed the Admiral Tributs and sea tanker Boris Butoma on a five-day goodwill visit to Manila.

Filipinos were allowed to tour the huge ships and Russian marines demonstrated their combat capabilities. Tobacco and beer magnate Lucio Tan, the 4th richest Filipino according to Forbes magazine, was among civilians who toured the ship.

Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana, who accompanied Duterte on the ship tour, expressed optimism about "the start of a partnership" between the two countries' defense establishments when he met with Russian navy officials Thursday night.

"May our common aspirations for regional and global peace and security enable us to become good partners, cooperating and coordinating towards tranquil and safe seas for all," Lorenzana said on board the Admiral Tributs.

He said during his trip to Russia in early December, he agreed with Russian defense officials to finalize a memorandum of understanding that will be the basis of future military engagements, including joint military exercises, so it can be signed during Duterte's planned trip to Russia in April.

The visit by the Russian navy ships is the third to the Philippines and the first under Duterte, who took office in June. Duterte has lashed out at outgoing President Barack Obama and his administration for criticizing Duterte's deadly crackdown on illegal drugs which is feared to have left more than 6,000 suspected drug users and dealers dead.

Contrastingly, he has reached out to China and Russia — whose leaders he has met recently — in a dramatic shift in Philippine foreign policy that has put Washington in a dilemma.

The Philippines has depended heavily on the U.S., its treaty ally, for weapons, ships and aircraft for years, although it has turned to other countries for defense equipment.

After visiting Moscow last month, Lorenzana said the Philippine military was considering purchasing sniper rifles from Russia.
source:
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SamuraiBlue

Captain
Japan to set up body to promote maritime safety in Southeast Asia

TOKYO (Kyodo) -- The Japan Coast Guard plans to establish an organization dedicated to helping Southeast Asian countries improve maritime safety capabilities, apparently as part of Japan's moves to deal with China's assertiveness at sea, JCG officials said Saturday.


The coast guard aims to build stronger ties with counterparts in the region as part of Japan's drive to enshrine the rule of law in coping with disputes in the South China Sea, where surrounding countries including China have competing territorial claims, they said.


In addition to disputes with China, the coast guards of Southeast Asian countries face a pressing need to enhance their ability to respond to natural disasters and piracy...... to read more
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Tillerson's comments being called out in Australia.

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Paul Keating castigates Rex Tillerson over comments on China
Australia’s former prime minister says claims by US secretary of state nominee threaten to involve the country in war

Gareth Hutchens
Thursday 12 January 2017 23.48 EST

Former prime minister Paul Keating has lambasted Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, saying his claim that China should be denied access to artificial islands it has built in the South China Sea threatens to involve Australia in war.

He says Australia must tell the Trump administration “from the get-go” that we will not be part of such adventurism, “just as we should have done on Iraq 15 years ago”.

Tillerson, a former ExxonMobil chief executive, told his confirmation hearing in Washington overnight that China’s control and construction of artificial islands in waters claimed by neighbouring countries was “akin to Russia’s taking of Crimea”.

Tillerson said China was declaring control of territories that did not rightfully belong to it, and it would threaten the “entire global economy” if it was allowed to control access to the waterway.

“We’re going to have to send China a clear signal that, first, the island-building stops and, second, your access to those islands also is not going to be allowed,” he said during his confirmation hearing to become America’s top diplomat.

“They are taking territory or control or declaring control of territories that are not rightfully China’s. The failure of a response [from the US] has allowed [China] just to keep pushing the envelope on this.

“The way we’ve got to deal with this is we’ve got to show back-up in the region with our traditional allies in south-east Asia,” he said.

Tillerson did not elaborate on how the US would bar China from the islands.

China claims sovereignty over almost the entire South China Sea, and has built seven artificial islands on reefs and rocks, and outfitted them with military-length airstrips and anti-aircraft guns.

Keating issued a public statement on Friday, castigating Tillerson for his recklessness.

“When the US Secretary of State-designate threatens to involve Australia in war with China, the Australian people need to take note,” Keating said.

“That is the only way Rex Tillerson’s testimony that a ‘signal’ should be sent to China that ‘access to these islands is not going to be allowed’, and that US allies in the region should be there ‘to show back-up’, can be read.

“We should tell the new US administration from the get-go that Australia will not be part of such adventurism, just as we should have done on Iraq 15 years ago. That means no naval commitment to joint operations in the South China Sea and no enhanced US military facilitation of such operations.

“Tillerson’s claim that China’s control of access to the waters would be a threat to ‘the entire global economy’ is simply ludicrous. No country would be more badly affected than China if it moved to impede navigation.

“On the other hand, Australia’s prosperity and the security of the world would be devastated by war,” Keating said.
 
Tillerson's prior brush with the SCS disputes.

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For Tillerson, South China Sea Storms Aren’t New
Dec 14, 2016 5:30 pm HKT

A top challenge for Rex Tillerson as Donald Trump’s secretary of state would be navigating the U.S.’s sensitive relationship with Beijing. On at least one flashpoint, the South China Sea, he has some familiarity.

Under Mr. Tillerson’s leadership, Exxon Mobil Corp. waded into one of the region’s thorniest diplomatic disputes when it signed a deal with Vietnam seven years ago to drill for natural gas, partly in waters also claimed by China, drawing Beijing’s ire and garnering attention from U.S. officials.

Some of Exxon’s blocks in Vietnam cross into waters claimed by both Hanoi and Beijing. Fear of angering China had driven some other oil companies away from the potentially lucrative reserves. Meanwhile, Exxon with Mr. Tillerson as CEO emerged as an important partner for Vietnam.

The company’s Vietnam president acknowledged the contested claims while briefing the U.S. Embassy in Hanoi in 2009, when Exxon quietly signed a production-sharing contract for the offshore blocks, according to a diplomatic cable leaked by Wikileaks.

Exxon said this week in response to questions that it is negotiating with Vietnam over commercial development of the offshore natural-gas reserves, but that those talks have only related to resources in undisputed waters.

Nevertheless, the company’s venture in Vietnam “creates some friction,” with China, said Victor Gao, formerly a Chinese Foreign Ministry official who also was a top executive at state-owned oil company Cnooc Ltd. He said Mr. Tillerson should “start from a fresh page.”

The disputed blocks in the South China Sea have been at the center of violent clashes between China and its neighbors previously. In 2014, a Chinese rig began drilling in waters contested by Vietnam, setting off a monthslong standoff between Chinese and Vietnamese security forces near the Paracel Islands chain, to the east of Exxon’s blocks.

Mr. Tillerson flew to Beijing in the middle of the row, meeting with oil-company executives including the chairman of China National Offshore Oil Corp., which controlled the rig at the center of the dispute. Neither companies have provided details on what was discussed.

China’s Foreign Ministry didn’t respond to a faxed request for comment on Exxon’s role in the South China Sea. A spokesman said at a regular press briefing this week that it was willing to work with whomever Mr. Trump selected at secretary of state for better bilateral ties.

Mr. Tillerson’s ties to Russia have attracted much attention recently, drawing some bipartisan concern in the U.S. over his ability to lead its diplomatic efforts around the world. He is a far lesser known figure in Beijing.

Part of the reason is money. It’s much more difficult for a foreign oil company to profit in China than in Russia, industry experts say. While China represents a huge market for energy, Russia’s production reserves benefit from from foreign capital to boost output and exports.

“Russia needs Exxon a lot more than China needs Exxon,” said Bo Kong, who researches China’s energy industry at the University of Oklahoma.

Exxon isn’t a complete stranger to China. It has a minority stake in large refinery in southern Fujian province, and a network of company-branded gas stations to profit from the rise of Chinese drivers. It also sells China liquefied natural gas from a huge project it operates in Papua New Guinea.

Exxon declined to comment on whether Mr. Tillerson personally had a view on China’s maritime claims, which cover nearly the entire South China Sea. The company has previously said it believes sovereignty issues are best left to governments to resolve. If confirmed as secretary of state, those are discussions the oilman could soon find himself in the middle of.

“Rex will know very well the sensitivities in the South China Sea,” said Mr. Gao, the former Chinese oil-company executive.

–Brian Spegele
 
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