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India supports freedom of navigation in international waters: A K Antony

Ashoka The Great

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Against the backdrop of growing Chinese assertion in the Asia-Pacific region, India today said it supports the “freedom of navigation” in international waters noting that any disputes or differences in the region must be resolved diplomatically.

Defence Minister A K Antony, who is here on a day-long visit, held wide ranging talks with his Thai counterpart Air Chief Marshal Sukhumpol Suwanatat, calling for cooperation in several areas including keeping open sea lanes and measures to tackle piracy.
He also offered to cooperate with Thailand in the field of defence production. Thailand praised India’s indigenously developed defence capabilities.

Antony said both India and Thailand had large stakes in the maintenance of peace and stability in its immediate neighbourhood and in the wider Asia Pacific region.

“Our trade is dependent on the sea lanes. Hence, security of the sea lanes and freedom of navigation is critical to our economic and overall security. India supports the freedom of navigation in accordance with the principles of international law,” he said in his talks with Suwanatat.

Noting that peace and stability was in the interest of all countries in the region, Antony said, “We support resolution of differences and disputes through the process of dialogue and consensus between the parties to such disputes.”

“All countries must exercise restraint and resolve issues diplomatically, according to the principles of international law,” he said.

Antony’s comments came amidst flexing of muscles by China in the South China Sea and the East China Sea.

China has in the recent past used its naval ships and aircraft to intimidate neighbouring countries including Japan which are in dispute with Beijing over maritime rights.

China has also increased presence of its maritime forces, including submarines and warships, in the Indian Ocean Region.

India supports freedom of navigation in international waters: A K Antony | idrw.org
 
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Who gives a rats arse what this little midget has to say. We invaded your country and humiliated the snot outta you and you did nothing for 3 weeks before we received concessions and withdrew on our own terms like a boss.

Like we give two hoots about what this midget has to say with his poofter military.
 
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Isn't this the funny fella who said India has right to build infrastructure along border days after the Indian Army dismantled the bunkers?

:lol: yup same dude.

The guy just comes up with the most hilarious remarks. The midget thinks he is some big shot because he is in charge of a military. The guy looks so unprofessional. Just look at what he wears. Ugh. His dress code just sums up the unprofessionalism in the Indian military.

Disgraceful if you ask me.
 
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New Delhi: The Indian Navy is practicing to operate in the South China Sea to protect its economic assets.

Speaking to reporters in New Delhi Admiral D K Joshi told reporters that "Where our country's interests are involved, we will protect them and we will intervene."

The Eastern Naval Command - which looks at India's eastern sea board and likely to play a key role when the Navy is deployed in South China Sea- is also being strengthened.

Admiral Joshi said apart from three stealth frigates, the nuclear-powered submarine INS Chakra and INS Jalashva, the amphibious landing ship which is also the biggest platform after INS Viraat, India's lone aircraft carrier.

The decision to use the Navy in the South China Sea comes days after Chinese state media announced that the southern Hainan province, which administers the South China Sea, approved laws giving its police the right to search vessels that pass through the waters. Also Philippines, Vietnam, Taiwan and India protested a map on a new Chinese passport that depicts disputed areas as belonging to China. The Philippines also issued a statement saying it wants Beijing to "clarify its reported plans to interdict ships that enter what it considers its territory in the South China Sea," the Associated Press reported over the weekend.

Admiral D K Joshi said ONGC has 4 oil exploration blocks off the coast of Vietnam. "If required we will intervene to protect (them)," he said and added that it is the navy's duty to protect India's sovereign assets. India, the Admiral said, had two basic concerns- "freedom of navigation in internal waters and protection of our internal assets."

The decision to prepare to intervene in the South China Sea indicates a huge shift in India's Maritime strategy. Previously, India had consistently maintained that Navy's area focus was the vast expanse of sea that lay between the Strait of Hormuz in the Gulf and the Straits of Malacca in the East.

Acknowledging the rapid modernisation of the Chinese navy, the navy chief said "It is actually a major cause of concern for us, which we continuously evaluate and work out our options and our strategies."

Indian Navy will intervene in South China sea, if required | NDTV.com
 
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Isn't this the funny fella who said India has right to build infrastructure along border days after the Indian Army dismantled the bunkers?

Do not use out of context anecdotes, which distort the reality of event!!

India has a right to build bunkers on border, which India continues too, what was dismantled was a tin shed structure, which was built after Chinese intrusion..on China's own perceived territory..to facilitate a return to status-quo agreement.
 
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The Hindu

With the Indian Navy Chief Admiral Nirmal Verma formally opening INS Baaz, India’s southernmost naval air station on Tuesday at Cambell Bay in Andaman and Nicobar Islands, the country acquired increased ability to mount hawk-like vigil on the vital maritime channel – the Strait of Malacca.

Describing INS Baaz as being “blessed with a brilliant strategic location’’, Admiral Verma said that the location at Cambell Bay, overlooking the Strait of Malacca and also dominating the 6 degree channel would provide an eagle’s eye view over the crucial waterways.

The Naval chief said that one of the primary functions of INS Baaz would be to provide information, based on ‘airborne’ maritime surveillance. “Maritime domain awareness is the key to effective and informed decision making in the maritime arena. Despite numerous advancements in the field of information gathering over sea, airborne surveillance, using aircraft and UAVs, remains invaluable,’’ he said.

Admiral Verma said the commissioning of the naval air station at Campbell Bay was a “small but significant step’’ towards supplementing India’s maritime capability in the islands of the Andaman and Nicobar group which offer a vital geo-strategic advantage to India.

He said the economic potential of Andaman and Nicobar islands was remarkable as they were endowed with a vast Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), accounting for almost 30 per cent of India’s entire EEZ. “These islands also sit astride some of the busiest shipping lanes of the Indian Ocean, most carrying strategic cargo for the East Asian economies,’’ he said.

The new base, about 300 nautical miles from Port Blair, will also include an upgraded airbase, will soon be operating heavier military planes from the Indian Air Force fleet like the just-inducted Hercules C-130J Super Hercules meant for special forces' operations. India already operates naval bases at Port Blair and Car Nicobar in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands chain. The unique Tri Services Command is also present in Andaman and Nicobar islands.

The government had recently sanctioned numerous steps to fortify infrastructure in the strategically located Andaman and Nicobar chain of Islands with forward operating bases in Kamorta (Nicobar Islands) and Diglipur (Andaman) as well.

10islandnew.jpg



Times Of india

NEW DELHI: To keep an eagle eye on the region around the strategically-located Andaman and Nicobar Islands, the Navy commissioned its new air station INS Baaz at Campbell Bay on Tuesday.

INS Baaz is the southernmost air station of the Indian armed forces, and overlooks the crucial Malacca Strait while dominating the Six-Degree Channel, and is in keeping with India's overall policy to counter China's strategic moves in the Indian Ocean region as well as ensure security of shipping lanes, as reported by TOI earlier.

The archipelago, separated as it is by over 650 nautical miles from our mainland, offers a vital geo-strategic advantage to India. Not only do they provide the nation with a commanding presence in the Bay of bengakl, the islands also serve as our window into East and South-East Asia,'' said Navy chief Admiral Nirmal Verma, after commissioning INS Baaz. INS Baaz, which will initially house Dornier naval surveillance aircraft, is currently equipped to operate light to heavy aircraft capable of short-field operations'' from a runway of about 3,500-feet.

The runway will be progressively lengthened to enable unrestricted operation of all category of aircraft including heavy ones. Apart from countering Chinese moves, the stepped-up military presence in the archipelago will provide a strong security cover to India's 600,000 sq km of Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) spread out in this region, which is around 30% of the country's total EEZ of 2.01 million sq km.

The islands host India's first and only regional 'theatre command', with all Army, Navy, IAF and Coast Guard forces under one operational commander, which was created as part of the national security reforms after the 1999 Kargil conflict. But the military force-levels have remained largely static in the tri-Service command since it came into existence in October 2001.

Under the overall island development plan'' now underway, which includes new naval air station at Campbell Bay, the existing runways at Campbell Bay and Shibpur are being extended, while three more (OTR) operational turn around bases for warships are being established in the archipelago. Moreover, new airstrips will come up at Kamorta and Little Andaman, while the existing two main runways at Port Blair and Car Nicobar are also being upgraded. The Army, too, is moving to add another battalion to the 108 Mountain Brigade based there.

New naval base –

1_25.jpg


To keep an eye on maritime security around the Malacca Straits and to gain strategic supremacy in the area, India will in about a fortnight from now open a new airbase, aptly named as Baaz (Hawk), in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, said defence sources.
The new naval base, which will get an upgraded air base too, will soon be operating heavier military planes from the Indian air fleet including the US-made special forces plane, C130Js, that was inducted last year.
INS Baaz will come up at Campbell Bay, India’s southeasternmost fringe in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands chain, which is actually closer to Indonesia than the Indian mainland.
It straddles a strategically key location in the Indian Ocean/Bay of Bengal overlooking the mouth of Malacca straits, from across Aceh in Indonesia.
This move by India comes even as the US spelt out its future strategy to focus on the Asia-Pacific in in “rebalancing” its military strategy earlier this year, while American Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said at the Shangri La Dialogue in Singapore last month that the US will base at least 60 percent of its naval assets in the Asia-Pacific region.
Malacca Straits is a key maritime chokepoint that acts as a link between the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean, connecting East Asia, Australia and the US with Asia and Africa, which are the key oil resources of the world.
At least a quarter of the world’s trade passes through Malacca Straits and more importantly, at least 80 percent of China’s oil requirements pass through this choke point.
India already operates naval bases at Port Blair and Car Nicobar in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands chain.
It also has at least three air strips at Diglipur in north Andamans, Port Blair, and at Carnic in Nicobar Islands.
The new base will significantly increase India’s strategic reach in the region, considering that Campbell Bay is about 300 nautical miles from Carnic, till now a major forward operating base of the country’s navy in its southeastern fringes.
That’s the distance between Delhi to Bhopal and now India’s navy and air force will be able to launch its operations from that far away deep inside Bay of Bengal and the Indian Ocean.
 
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:lol: yup same dude.

The guy just comes up with the most hilarious remarks. The midget thinks he is some big shot because he is in charge of a military. The guy looks so unprofessional. Just look at what he wears. Ugh. His dress code just sums up the unprofessionalism in the Indian military.

Disgraceful if you ask me.

He unlike your defense minister is a civilian and does not pretend to be military . He does not have to dress up in militray uniforms with made up medals on his chest. He is not Beijing bob minister of defense propaganda.

He has the world wanting to ally with India and happy to share and sell military technology, you have yourself and Russia and a stealing /copy/paste reputation . who has done more for his country then in the international arena?
 
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:lol: yup same dude.

The guy just comes up with the most hilarious remarks. The midget thinks he is some big shot because he is in charge of a military. The guy looks so unprofessional. Just look at what he wears. Ugh. His dress code just sums up the unprofessionalism in the Indian military.

Disgraceful if you ask me.

What I think is, disgraceful is a Chinese calling others midgets!!
 
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He unlike your defense minister is a civilian and does not pretend to be military . He does not have to dress up in militray uniforms with made up medals on his chest. He is not Beijing bob minister of defense propaganda.

He has the world wanting to ally with India and happy to share and sell military technology, you have yourself and Russia and a stealing /copy/paste reputation . who has done more for his country then in the international arena?

Not really.

This midget just sums up why we utterly slaughtered the living snot outta your military in 1962, 1967 and 1987. Indians just don't know how to win wars, that's why that skinny bigger Mahatma Gandhi begged his white masters for independence. Indians are cowards at fighting so you need diplomacy.

What I think is, disgraceful is a Chinese calling others midgets!!

What's more disgraceful is a lowly Indian laughing at Chinese people when even you know we are a superior humans both physically and intellectually.
 
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Not really.

This midget just sums up why we utterly slaughtered the living snot outta your military in 1962, 1967 and 1987. Indians just don't know how to win wars, that's why that skinny bigger Mahatma Gandhi begged his white masters for independence. Indians are cowards at fighting so you need diplomacy.

revisionist history taught to you by your brainwashing govt not withstanding. Nanking also saw how great you were militarily and had not the white Americans come to save your hide , you would have continued to have the Japanese gene in your family tree.
 
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The Hindu

With the Indian Navy Chief Admiral Nirmal Verma formally opening INS Baaz, India’s southernmost naval air station on Tuesday at Cambell Bay in Andaman and Nicobar Islands, the country acquired increased ability to mount hawk-like vigil on the vital maritime channel – the Strait of Malacca.

Describing INS Baaz as being “blessed with a brilliant strategic location’’, Admiral Verma said that the location at Cambell Bay, overlooking the Strait of Malacca and also dominating the 6 degree channel would provide an eagle’s eye view over the crucial waterways.

The Naval chief said that one of the primary functions of INS Baaz would be to provide information, based on ‘airborne’ maritime surveillance. “Maritime domain awareness is the key to effective and informed decision making in the maritime arena. Despite numerous advancements in the field of information gathering over sea, airborne surveillance, using aircraft and UAVs, remains invaluable,’’ he said.

Admiral Verma said the commissioning of the naval air station at Campbell Bay was a “small but significant step’’ towards supplementing India’s maritime capability in the islands of the Andaman and Nicobar group which offer a vital geo-strategic advantage to India.

He said the economic potential of Andaman and Nicobar islands was remarkable as they were endowed with a vast Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), accounting for almost 30 per cent of India’s entire EEZ. “These islands also sit astride some of the busiest shipping lanes of the Indian Ocean, most carrying strategic cargo for the East Asian economies,’’ he said.

The new base, about 300 nautical miles from Port Blair, will also include an upgraded airbase, will soon be operating heavier military planes from the Indian Air Force fleet like the just-inducted Hercules C-130J Super Hercules meant for special forces' operations. India already operates naval bases at Port Blair and Car Nicobar in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands chain. The unique Tri Services Command is also present in Andaman and Nicobar islands.

The government had recently sanctioned numerous steps to fortify infrastructure in the strategically located Andaman and Nicobar chain of Islands with forward operating bases in Kamorta (Nicobar Islands) and Diglipur (Andaman) as well.

10islandnew.jpg



Times Of india

NEW DELHI: To keep an eagle eye on the region around the strategically-located Andaman and Nicobar Islands, the Navy commissioned its new air station INS Baaz at Campbell Bay on Tuesday.

INS Baaz is the southernmost air station of the Indian armed forces, and overlooks the crucial Malacca Strait while dominating the Six-Degree Channel, and is in keeping with India's overall policy to counter China's strategic moves in the Indian Ocean region as well as ensure security of shipping lanes, as reported by TOI earlier.

The archipelago, separated as it is by over 650 nautical miles from our mainland, offers a vital geo-strategic advantage to India. Not only do they provide the nation with a commanding presence in the Bay of bengakl, the islands also serve as our window into East and South-East Asia,'' said Navy chief Admiral Nirmal Verma, after commissioning INS Baaz. INS Baaz, which will initially house Dornier naval surveillance aircraft, is currently equipped to operate light to heavy aircraft capable of short-field operations'' from a runway of about 3,500-feet.

The runway will be progressively lengthened to enable unrestricted operation of all category of aircraft including heavy ones. Apart from countering Chinese moves, the stepped-up military presence in the archipelago will provide a strong security cover to India's 600,000 sq km of Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) spread out in this region, which is around 30% of the country's total EEZ of 2.01 million sq km.

The islands host India's first and only regional 'theatre command', with all Army, Navy, IAF and Coast Guard forces under one operational commander, which was created as part of the national security reforms after the 1999 Kargil conflict. But the military force-levels have remained largely static in the tri-Service command since it came into existence in October 2001.

Under the overall island development plan'' now underway, which includes new naval air station at Campbell Bay, the existing runways at Campbell Bay and Shibpur are being extended, while three more (OTR) operational turn around bases for warships are being established in the archipelago. Moreover, new airstrips will come up at Kamorta and Little Andaman, while the existing two main runways at Port Blair and Car Nicobar are also being upgraded. The Army, too, is moving to add another battalion to the 108 Mountain Brigade based there.

New naval base –

1_25.jpg


To keep an eye on maritime security around the Malacca Straits and to gain strategic supremacy in the area, India will in about a fortnight from now open a new airbase, aptly named as Baaz (Hawk), in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, said defence sources.
The new naval base, which will get an upgraded air base too, will soon be operating heavier military planes from the Indian air fleet including the US-made special forces plane, C130Js, that was inducted last year.
INS Baaz will come up at Campbell Bay, India’s southeasternmost fringe in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands chain, which is actually closer to Indonesia than the Indian mainland.
It straddles a strategically key location in the Indian Ocean/Bay of Bengal overlooking the mouth of Malacca straits, from across Aceh in Indonesia.
This move by India comes even as the US spelt out its future strategy to focus on the Asia-Pacific in in “rebalancing” its military strategy earlier this year, while American Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said at the Shangri La Dialogue in Singapore last month that the US will base at least 60 percent of its naval assets in the Asia-Pacific region.
Malacca Straits is a key maritime chokepoint that acts as a link between the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean, connecting East Asia, Australia and the US with Asia and Africa, which are the key oil resources of the world.
At least a quarter of the world’s trade passes through Malacca Straits and more importantly, at least 80 percent of China’s oil requirements pass through this choke point.
India already operates naval bases at Port Blair and Car Nicobar in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands chain.
It also has at least three air strips at Diglipur in north Andamans, Port Blair, and at Carnic in Nicobar Islands.
The new base will significantly increase India’s strategic reach in the region, considering that Campbell Bay is about 300 nautical miles from Carnic, till now a major forward operating base of the country’s navy in its southeastern fringes.
That’s the distance between Delhi to Bhopal and now India’s navy and air force will be able to launch its operations from that far away deep inside Bay of Bengal and the Indian Ocean.

First the Indian navy doesn't have the capability to close down anything let alone taking on the PLAN.

Second, if you miraculously ever manage to harm our country, we will wipe that Indian race off the map. Chinese military generals are cold, brutal and absolutely ruthless humans. The PLA ain't going to take sh*t from a low class military and people like India.

We are superior to Indians in every way possible, why? God made us that way.
 
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What's more disgraceful is a lowly Indian laughing at Chinese people when even you know we are a superior humans both physically and intellectually.

are you so superior that your own govt stomps on you and disallows you from reading mere articles of dissent and bans websites. That tell us the even your own govt thinks you are not mature intellectually to be able to handle reading simple words. They treat you like dimwits :rofl:
 
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revisionist history taught to you by your brainwashing govt not withstanding. Nanking also saw how great you were militarily and had not the white Americans come to save your hide , you would have continued to have the Japanese gene in your family tree.

Actually the PLA defeated the Japs, go read up on proper history, not what the American regime's mouthpieces spew.

We don't have Japanese genes because we fought and defeated that ****** Jap military.

However, Indians do have the Muslim gene since you were ruled by the Muslims for 1000 years and then for 200 years by the whites.
 
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Who gives a rats arse what this little midget has to say. We invaded your country and humiliated the snot outta you and you did nothing for 3 weeks before we received concessions and withdrew on our own terms like a boss.

Like we give two hoots about what this midget has to say with his poofter military.

:omghaha: :omghaha: :omghaha:

First the Indian navy doesn't have the capability to close down anything let alone taking on the PLAN.

Second, if you miraculously ever manage to harm our country, we will wipe that Indian race off the map.

Meanwhile, Beijing, Shanghai and HonKong will burn into ashes :cheers:
 
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