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Indian Navy Anti-Piracy Efforts

pirates should take a look here :)

RIA Novosti - Russia - Russia, India to hold joint naval drills in Jan. 2009

Russia, India to hold joint naval drills in Jan. 2009
14:03 | 20/ 11/ 2008

VLADIVOSTOK, November 20 (RIA Novosti) - Russia and India will conduct joint naval exercises in the Indian Ocean in January next year, a spokesman for Russia's Pacific Fleet said on Thursday.

INDRA is a biennial Russian-Indian exercise aimed at practicing cooperative engagement to enforce maritime law and counter piracy, terrorism, and drug smuggling. It is the fourth such exercise since 2003.

"A task force from the Pacific Fleet, led by the Varyag missile cruiser, will leave Vladivostok in December and set sail for the Indian Ocean to participate in joint drills with the Indian navy," Capt. 1st Rank Roman Martov said.

He said that the task force will also conduct joint exercises with a task force from Russia's Northern Fleet, led by the Pyotr Veliky nuclear-powered missile cruiser, which will arrive in the Indian Ocean after joint drills with the Venezuelan Navy in late November.

"Following the exercises, the Russian warships will pay friendly visits to several ports in India and China," the spokesman said.

Martov also cited Vice Admiral Konstantin Sidenko, commander of the Pacific Fleet, as saying that Russian warships from the fleet will make several long-range training sorties in the South Pacific and Indian oceans in 2009, and participate in a number of exercises involving live-firing drills.

Russia announced last year that its Navy had resumed and would build up a constant presence in different regions of the world's oceans.
 
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Thu, Nov 20 07:22 PM

New Delhi/London/Dubai, Nov 20 (IANS) India is considering increased deployment, including aerial reconnaissance, of the pirate-infested Gulf of Aden after a spike in hijackings by Somali brigands in the last fortnight that disrupted shipping in the world's busiest sea lane.

Indian Navy chief Admiral Sureesh Mehta Thursday said even as New Delhi is keen on a 'collaborative' arrangement with other countries to take on piracy in that strategic region, the navy is also considering the option of aerial policing to protects its ships.

'Aerial recce will be considered in the Gulf of Aden. We are considering augmenting our efforts to keep the Indian traffic in the region safe,' Mehta said.

'All men of war are mandated to take action in self defence,' Mehta said talking about the retaliatory fire by Indian Navy's stealth frigate INS Tabar Tuesday night that sank what was called a Somali pirate 'mother ship' and forced them to abandon an attack speedboat it was towing.

INS Tabar, which so far has escorted 35 merchant vessels passing through the region, had also staved off pirate attacks on two merchant ships last week.

Somali pirates in the Gulf of Aden were involved in brazen acts of piracy this week, having hijacked nine ships, including the Saudi supertanker Sirius Star.

India, meanwhile, told Somalia in a diplomatic communication that it will use 'all necessary means' against pirates operating against international merchant ships on key shipping routes in the Indian Ocean.

'We have conveyed through the permanent representative of Somalia in New York (representing the transitional federal government) our desire to use all necessary means against repressive acts of piracy,' ministry of external affairs secretary (east) N Ravi told reporters.

India had recently at a meeting of the International Maritime Organisation in London re-tabled its long-standing proposal to set up a UN peacekeeping force to tackle pirates in the Gulf of Aden.

The Gulf of Aden is vital for the trade and economy of India and the rest of the world as it provides access to the Suez Canal through which ships transit between Europe and Asia without having to take the longer and more expensive route around the southern tip of Africa. It is a crucially important route for oil tankers.

The sinking of the pirate ship has prodded others, including powerful military nations, into announcing swift and coordinated action in the Gulf of Aden.

Nato military chiefs met in Brussels Wednesday to discuss anti-piracy strategy after the International Maritime Bureau described the situation as 'out of control.'

Nato countries were said to be considering a 'plethora of proposals' to deal with the problem, but it wasn't immediately clear if they discussed India's call - made last week - for a UN force under a unified command.

The Arab League also convened an emergency meeting in Cairo to discuss how best to co-operate to deal with the growing piracy.

The Indian Navy's action drew praise in Dubai too.

'The international community has not taken enough and quick measures to tackle the pirates,' George Katout of the Dubai office of Barry Rogliano Salles, a Paris-headquartered shipbroking company, told IANS.

'What the Indian Navy did was normal. But you must remember there are many non-Indian ships plying on those waters,' Katout said.

Diplomatic sources here said there was immediate need for a joint coordinated action by the navies of different countries whose ships pass through the Gulf of Aden.

'It is important for our commerce to go on,' a senior Indian diplomat posted in the Gulf said.

Another diplomatic source in Qatar said the recent defence pact India signed with that Gulf nation during Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's visit would help in wider international efforts to counter piracy in the region.

The pact covers the issue of maritime security as well.
 
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now what u say flint, I hope you will say something positive here :)

Well yeah, good job and all that, but I doubt any pirate vessel could pose a threat to an Indian Navy frigate.

They simply opened machine-gun fire and the 'mother vessel' blew up!

My point being that Indian Navy is just doing its job - I don't see the same celebrations every time a militant is shot by the army, for example - and that is far more dangerous because the soldiers are actually killed in the gunfights.
 
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Well yeah, good job and all that, but I doubt any pirate vessel could pose a threat to an Indian Navy frigate.

They simply opened machine-gun fire and the 'mother vessel' blew up!

My point being that Indian Navy is just doing its job - I don't see the same celebrations every time a militant is shot by the army, for example - and that is far more dangerous because the soldiers are actually killed in the gunfights.

I am not sure about the celebrations but this is happening thousands of miles away from Indian territory. That is significant.
 
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Well I'd be cautious if I were the Indians as far as publicizing these exploits going forward. It appears their nationals are the majority of captives on the vessels captured, this being by virtue of the shipping lane involved and India's huge prescence in the global merchant marine fleet.

Basically, if the Pirates start incurring losses and they attribute to India because this story has gotten major press, they might take it out on the nationals in their custody. Although, in the end one should be glad they appear now to be completely motivated by greed.
 
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Larger Indian warship to fight pirates off Aden

New Delhi (IANS): The Indian Navy will be sending guided-missile destroyer INS Mysore to the Gulf of Aden for patrolling the waterways hit by a spate of ship hijackings by Somali pirates, defence sources said Thursday.

The move comes after a successful hostile action against Somali pirates in the area by the Indian Navy.

A Delhi class destroyer, INS Mysore will replace INS Tabar in the Gulf of Aden, a Navy official told IANS on condition of anonymity. He said the destroyer will set sail from Mumbai soon.

The official said a proposal of the shipping ministry to send four more warships to strengthen operations against piracy in that region was still pending.

The Indian Navy's stealth frigate INS Tabar Tuesday night engaged the pirates and sank a "mother vessel" that had two speedboats in tow. INS Tabar, which so far has escorted 35 merchant vessels passing through the region, had also staved off pirate attacks on two merchant ships last week.

The 6,900-ton Delhi class destroyers are the largest indigenously built warships till date and pack more fire power in them than frigates.

INS Mysore carries on board two Sea King helicopters, along with a Cheetah or a Chetak, and stock 16 Uran missiles, 100mm AK 100 Gun, four multi-barrel 30mm AK 630 gun.

With Marine Commandos, INS Mysore is said to be a potent force to patrol the Gulf of Aden to stop the pirates from attacking or hijacking merchant vessels.

..........
 
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Well I'd be cautious if I were the Indians as far as publicizing these exploits going forward. It appears their nationals are the majority of captives on the vessels captured, this being by virtue of the shipping lane involved and India's huge prescence in the global merchant marine fleet.

Basically, if the Pirates start incurring losses and they attribute to India because this story has gotten major press, they might take it out on the nationals in their custody. Although, in the end one should be glad they appear now to be completely motivated by greed.

Although the point you raise has some rational but for pirates only alive men have value (chance of getting ransom). Dead men have no value for them. And once they kill in this way may be commando raids will be sanctioned and the situation will become more ugly.
 
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INS Mysore-D-60 Delhi Class Missile Destroyer.
Type 15 Delhi Class

4750027c6ca84ab821274dcc76129877.jpg


53bcd7fa4024674fc7d59ed176fb36b8.jpg
 
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India 'to step up piracy battle'

India is bolstering its naval presence in the Gulf of Aden to tackle piracy off Somalia's coast, reports say.

The Indian navy is planning to send at least one more warship to the area, according to local media reports.

And Delhi has formally been given permission to act under a UN resolution allowing navies to pursue pirates into Somalia's territorial waters.

Piracy incidents have surged off the Somali coast and a number of Indian crews have been on hijacked ships.

On Tuesday, an Indian warship sank a suspected pirate "mother ship" after it came under attack in the Gulf of Aden.

Earlier this week, a Saudi Arabian super tanker, the Sirius Star, was hijacked along with 25 crew. The tanker, loaded with oil worth $100m, is now anchored off the Somali coast.

Security Council mandate

According to local media reports, the Indian navy now plans to send at least one more warship to the Gulf of Aden.

INS Mysore - a destroyer - could be deployed as early as next week, reports say.
SOMALIA PIRACY
The Navy refused to confirm the report, saying it did not discuss deployment of ships.

Under a UN Security Council resolution passed in June, states co-operating with Somalia's transitional government are permitted, for a period of six months, to enter its territorial waters to "repress acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea".

The international forces are allowed to use "all necessary means", in a manner consistent with relevant provisions of international law, according to resolution 1816.

India is among several countries currently patrolling the Gulf of Aden, one of the world's busiest shipping lanes which connects the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean.

In recent weeks, there has been a growing demand for multinational efforts to fight the pirates, with more than 90 vessels attacked this year.

France, India, South Korea, Russia, Spain, the US and Nato also have a presence in the region.

'Pirate-infested waters'

India has called for greater co-operation between foreign navies to tackle the piracy threat.

India deployed INS Tabar in the Gulf of Aden on 23 October, and it has escorted 35 ships safely through the "pirate-infested waters", the navy says.

Meanwhile, the Directorate General of Shipping in India has confirmed that seven Indians are among the crew of the MV Delight, a Hong-Kong registered Iranian cargo ship, which was hijacked on Tuesday.

The 25-member crew includes two Pakistanis, seven Filipinos, seven Iranians and two Ghanaians.

The ship was carrying wheat and was bound for Iran.

A week ago, 18 Indian crew members of the Japanese-owned cargo ship MV Stolt Valor were released after being held by pirates for two months.

Somalia has not had a functioning national government since 1991 and has suffered continuing civil strife.


Story from BBC NEWS:
BBC NEWS | South Asia | India 'to step up piracy battle'

Published: 2008/11/21 16:36:56 GMT

© BBC MMVIII
 
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good stuff these pirates have become a menace and should be dealt with firmly. I think direct attacks on pirate bases in Somalia wouldn't be such a bad idea, that should drive the message home.
 
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Navy action in Gulf of Aden projects Indian power on high seas

22 Nov 2008, 0143 hrs IST, Indrani Bagchi, TNN

NEW DELHI: After Chandrayaan 1, the Indian Navy's action against a Somali pirate mother ship was an emphatic power projection statement that India is the ideal blend of "hard" and "soft" power.

Since the turn of the century, when India undertook patrolling and anti-piracy missions in the Straits of Malacca, Indian Navy has been a potent tool for the country's power projection capabilities.

Rescuing Japan's ships from pirates in the Straits of Malacca, the next step was to escort coalition ships during Operation Enduring Freedom in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. India's presence in these waters didn't go uncontested and for many years, it was a difficult deal to swallow for countries like Malaysia, Indonesia etc.

But soon, India declared Indian Ocean to be its strategic backyard. When the 2004 tsunami struck, it was Indian naval ships first off the mark to reach relief and aid to Indonesia and Sri Lanka. In May this year, when Cyclone Nargis struck Myanmar, it was Indian ships that first delivered aid. And then there was INS Tabar's downing of a pirate ship earlier this week.

While India's force projections in the Indian Ocean region is not new, the fundamental statement that India makes with its naval actions is the "benign" nature of its naval diplomacy. Unlike the Chinese intentions in the Indian Ocean, which makes many countries uncomfortable, India has shown that it's not in the business of territorial acquisitions. And it's a message that's gone home.

A few weeks ago, India received an approval from the Somalian transitional government to conduct patrols on its waters. This was India's first foray into the Gulf of Aden and Horn of Africa waters.

But despite the Navy's actions, in many ways it conducts its maritime diplomacy with one hand tied behind its back. In the absence of any institutional framework which lets Indian and other navies "talk" to each other, the Indian Navy is primarily working with others on the "buddy trail" or through ad hoc arrangements.

For instance, India did not accede to the 2005 Sua Protocol -- which provides the clearest definitions of piracy and sets out rules of engagement. India's objections to the protocol, which makes distinctions between NPT and non-NPT states, no longer really apply after NSG gave India a blanket waiver.

The Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI) is problematic for India for a host of sovereignty reasons, but that also keeps India out of an 80-plus group of countries. India is not a member of the Combined Task Force 150 (set up after Enduring Freedom). And it has not signed interoperability agreements with UK, US, or France, which are the chief navies in that region.

So, India functions on a day to day, hour to hour basis -- since its radio frequencies are not compatible with the others. This makes the task of coordination and combined operations rather difficult. The only reason the Navy functions is by the fact of its own relations with other counterparts.

Just putting Indian ships in the area will not be enough. They will need to be part of a big multinational strategy, because several rules have to be made and followed like who does the Indian Navy protect -- its own ships or some others or all vessels. How does it share time and space with the other navies in the region?

India's ambitions are not small, and in many ways, its capabilities are not small either. It needs more tools to play the high stakes game of power on the high seas.

Navy action in Gulf of Aden projects Indian power on high seas-India-The Times of India
 
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Though the pirates were a cinch, this marks a new chapter in the history of our civilization.

For the first time in a long time, an Indian navy is projecting power in the deep seas.
 
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Does the guarded US reaction to the action of INS Tabar in sinking a suspected mothership of the pirates on November 18, 2008 indicate a discomfort over India's unilateral and proactive role?

The policy of the Indian Navy in its operations against Somali pirates in the Gulf of Aden area can be characterised as one of active defence of Indian shipping. That means, protection of Indian commercial ships
and foreign ships with a large complement of Indian crew transitingthrough these waters and action in self-defence against pirate boats and ships, which threaten Indian lives and interests and threaten to attack Indian naval ships patrolling the seas in this area. The indications till now are that their role will not be extended to cover active intervention to free already hijacked ships. If preventive measures fail, the responsibility for getting a hijacked ship released from the custody of the pirates will be largely that of the company
owning the ship.

Any active intervention role will require the presence of more ships with more specially-trained commandoes on board. Moreover, if the intervention attempt fails, there could be diplomatic and other complications. It has been reported that the ministry of shipping of the government of India is keen that at least four ships of the Navy should be on anti-piracy patrol. The present policy seems to be to have one ship on rotation on permanent anti-piracy patrol. At the most, this may be increased to two if resources and circumstances
permit. Admiral Sureesh Mehta, the Chief of the Naval Staff, told the media on November 20, 2008, that the Navy was also considering the option of an aerial recce of the region. He has also been quoted as saying: "We are considering augmenting our efforts to keep the Indian traffic in the region safe."

The government of India has reasons to be gratified that the successful action of INS Tabar, the frigate presently on patrolling duty, in sinking a suspected mothership of the pirates on November 18, 2008, has been positively viewed by the countries of the region as well as by those outside the region. It has also been uniformly hailed by private shipping companies using the Gulf of Aden. It is equally gratifying that the government of Pakistan, which under Pervez Musharraf was opposed to any Indian role in maritime security in this region, has not so far reacted adversely to the proposed permanent presence of one or two Indian naval ships in the waters of this region.

Was the US consulted before India decided to deploy INS Tabar in the Gulf of Aden? An answer to this question is not available. It may be recalled that in the past the US had tried to have India's role in maritime security confined to the seas to the East of India. It was opposed to any Indian role in the seas to the West of India out of deference to the sensitivities and concerns of Pakistan.Now, it seems to be reconciled to India's role even if it had not actively encouraged it.

Pakistani sources, however, suspect that India would not have taken this initiative without an approving nod from the US and that the US would not have given this nod without consulting the government of Pakistan. If it ultimately turns out that the US did consult Pakistan and that it did not object to the Indian role, this would mark a qualitative change for the better in the perceptions of the present Pakistani government towards India.

It is, at the same time, intriguing that the US has not hailed the successful action of INS Tabar as enthusiastically as one would have expected it.

Official US comments on what is perceived by private shipping companies as the weak response of the US-led coalition to the surge in piracy in this region have emphasised caution in dealing with the piracy. According to a despatch of the Agence France Presse (AFP),
Geoff Morrell, a media spokesperson of the Pentagon, told pressmen in Washington DC on November 19, 2008, that a military approach was not the answer to a surge in piracy off the Horn of Africa and said that
the shipping companies should do more on their own to protect their vessels. "You could have all the navies in the world having all their ships out there, you know, it's not going to ever solve this problem," he said, and added: "It requires a holistic approach from the international community at sea, ashore, with governance, with economic development."


According to the AFP, Morrell said that at least 18 ships are currently being held for ransom by Somali pirates, along with 330 crew members taken hostage. This year there have been 95 attempted ship seizures by pirates in the Gulf of Aden, 39 of them successful.Not only has the incidence of piracy increased, but pirates are going farther out in the high seas. He then said: "Trust me, this subject is being dealt with at the highest levels of this government.It is a real concern. And we are constantly evaluating what the best approach is. I'm just trying to get you to think beyond the notion of, 'The answer is strictly kinetics. We've got to board more ships. We've got to fire on more pirates.' "

Commenting on the hijacking of a Saudi oil supertanker, another Pentagon spokesperson Dana Perino said: "The White House said President George W. Bush had been briefed about the seizure of the Saudi supertanker. Ensuring the safety and well being of the crew is of paramount importance in preventing or dealing with issues of piracy.And the goal would be to try to help get this ship to safety, secure the crew, and then work with our international partners to try to alleviate the piracy problem. Washington is working with other
members of the Security Council right now to work out how to more effectively fight against piracy.It's a very complicated issue. There's a lot of international laws that factor into these efforts."

According to the AFP report, Morrell urged that the UN Security Council should vote a resolution that authorizes anti-piracy activities. He said that commercial shipping companies also should stick to safer sea lanes away from shore and invest in protective measures, including technical devices and armed guards. "The shipping companies also have an obligation to secure their ships to prevent incidents such that we've been seeing at alarming rates over the past several months," he added.

The State Department convened a high level group of officials to examine the issue, but Sean McCormack, a spokesperson of the Department, called piracy "an international problem" that the US was not going to solve alone.

Do the guarded comments of the Pentagon and the State Department and the absence of appreciative references to the action of INS Tabar in US governmental circles indicate a discomfort over India's unilateral
and proactive role? Such guarded comments, however, are not new. In the past too, the US attitude to its anti-piracy role in the Horn of Africa region lacked clarity and a readiness to act.

Caution in dealing with the increasing problem of piracy in the Horn of Africa area has been a defining characteristic of the US policy and this is one of the reasons which had contributed to the surge in piracy.

After launching its military action against Al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan under Operation Enduring Freedom on October 7, 2001, the US took the initiative in setting up a joint naval task force called the Combined Task Force (CTF) 150, with headquarters in Djibouti. The Pakistani Navy was invited to be a member of this Task Force. Musharraf agreed to the Pakistani Navy joining it on condition that the Indian Navy would be kept out. The Task Force is commanded by naval officers from different member countries by rotation. It is presently commanded by Commodore Per Bigum Christensen of Denmark. It conducts Maritime Security Operations (MSO) in the Gulf of Aden, the Gulf of Oman, the Arabian Sea, the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean.

According to a US Navy website, "the MSO help develop security in the maritime environment, which promotes stability and global prosperity. These operations complement the counterterrorism and security efforts of regional nations and seek to disrupt violent extremists' use of the maritime environment as a venue for attack or to transport personnel, weapons or other material." Since its inception, its focus was mainly
on anti-smuggling and anti-infiltration tasks--meaning preventing the smuggling and pentration of men and material to Al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan and to Al Qaeda in Iraq. Counter-piracy was given a low priority.

On August 22,2008, the Task Force established a Maritime Security Patrol Area (MSPA) in support of the International Maritime Organization's (IMO) call for international assistance to discourage attacks on commercial vessels transiting the Gulf of Aden. According to statements issued by the US Navy, the MSPA is a geographic area in the Gulf of Aden utilized by Combined Maritime Forces to focus their efforts against destabilizing activities. These activities include, but are not limited to: criminal activities, drug smuggling operations that support terrorist and violent extremist organizations and human smuggling. Coalition forces patrol the MSPA, which is not marked or defined by visual navigational means, on a routine basis. Vice-Admiral Bill Gortney, Commander, Combined Maritime Forces, was quoted as saying: "Coalition maritime efforts will give the IMO time to work international efforts that will ultimately lead to a long-term
solution." He said that the shipping industry must consider hiring security teams for their vessels.

Even after the setting-up of the MSPA, the US response to the surge in piracy has been cautious. It has been trying to discourage any undue expectations from the shipping companies that this probably presaged a
more robust role by the US Navy against Somali piracy. The only Navies, which have so far shown a readiness to play a robust role are those of France, the UK and India. The reasons for the continued US caution are not clear.

India's decision to send INS Tabar to the Gulf of Aden to protect Indian shipping was triggered off by the hijacking of a Japanese ship with largely Indian crew and the emotional criticism by the families of the crew of the seeming government inaction. It was a tactical move taken in a hurry without much thought being given to the development of a strategic martime security architecture in the region to protect the region against piracy as well as maritime terrorism, in concert with other affected countries. The development of such a mechanism
needs attention.

The Chinese are as much worried over piracy in this region as we are.A Chinese fishing vessel with a 26-member crew, 17 of them Chinese, was hijacked recently by Somali pirates. It is not known whether the
vessel is still in the custody of the pirates or has been released. Our support for any Chinese role in a multilateral maritime security mechanism should be made conditional on their supporting India's permanent membership of the UN Security Council.

Achtung! Indians Ahead : outlookindia.com

A bit longish article but a good read.
 
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The cautious US reaction is obvious they can't play second fiddle any where. Good initiative though by IN.
 
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