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Malabar Naval Exercise - Indian, Japan, Australia & US

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The exercise will bring together the navies of India, Japan, Australia and the U.S. in the Bay of Bengal at the end of the year, according to senior Indian officials who asked not to be identified, citing rules.

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The Malabar exercises between the Indian and the US navies were instituted in 1992.

India plans to invite Australia to join the annual Malabar naval exercise that has so far included just Japan and the U.S., in a move that could risk China's ire.

The decision to include Australia in the drills -- the first time all members of the regional grouping known as the Quad will be engaged at a military level -- comes as Beijing and New Delhi are caught up in their worst border tensions in four decades. The exercise will bring together the navies of India, Japan, Australia and the U.S. in the Bay of Bengal at the end of the year, according to senior Indian officials who asked not to be identified, citing rules.

New Delhi is expected to clear the way next week for a formal invitation to Australia following final government clearance and consultations with the U.S. and Japan, the officials said.

"The timing of India potentially letting Australia into Malabar would be especially significant at this juncture," said Derek Grossman, researcher at the Washington-based RAND Corporation who worked in the U.S. intelligence community for more than a decade. "It would send a significant message to China that the Quad -- U.S., Australia, Japan, and India -- are de facto conducting joint naval exercises, even if not technically conducted under the auspices of a Quad event."

China has been uncomfortable with the informal coalition of four democracies, which was first formed in 2004 to help nations in the Indo-Pacific after the tsunami and revived in 2017. Post the coronavirus pandemic, the grouping has been coordinating efforts every month with Vietnam, South Korea and New Zealand.

Indian Navy Spokesperson Commander Vivek Madhawal declined to comment.

A spokesperson for Australia's defense department said in an emailed statement on Friday that while the nation was yet to receive an invitation to Exercise Malabar, "Australia sees value in participating in quadrilateral defense activities in order to increase interoperability and advance our collective interests in a free, open and prosperous Indo-Pacific region."

Strengthening Ties

While the Malabar exercises between U.S. and Indian navies were instituted in 1992, they have been more regular since 2004 with other Asian nations joining in the annual event. China had objected to the only other time Australia participated in the drills along with India, Japan, U.S. and Singapore in 2007.

India's inclusion of Australia this year follows a defense agreement and upgrading ties to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. The Mutual Logistics support agreement announced in May by Prime Ministers Narendra Modi and Scott Morrison allows access to each other's bases and ports. India has a similar agreement with the U.S.

Canberra's inclusion in the games was "only a matter of time" given improving defense and economic ties, according to Biren Nanda, former Indian High Commissioner to Australia and senior fellow at Delhi Policy Group. Australia's merchandise trade with India for the year ended June 2019 was A$21.1 billion ($14.5 billion), according to Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

"There's no direct relation between inviting Australia and what's happening at the Sino-Indian border," said Nanda in a phone interview. "This was a natural progression. Yet the question will be raised: how would the Chinese regard this? And they will react negatively. Just like they had done earlier."

Weaponized Quad

China objected to Japan's inclusion in the U.S-India annual Malabar event in 2015 with the then foreign ministry spokesperson Hong Lei warning "relevant countries" to not "provoke confrontation and create tension" in the region. Five years later, with an assertive China pushing neighbors across the Asian seas, Nanda expects a similar response.

Yet, there may be more acceptance to the idea of "like-minded democracies that seek to keep the Indo-Pacific free and open" amid India's rapidly souring on China ties, purely out of frustration, said Rajeswari Pillai Rajagoplan, distinguished fellow at New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation and author of 'Clashing Titans: Military Strategy and Insecurity Among Asian Great Powers.'

Although India and China are now in the process of disengaging along their 3,488 kilometer (2,167 mile) unmarked boundary in the Himalayas after high-level military and diplomatic talks, the deadly clashes that followed the months-long standoff in the Galwan valley was a blow to relations between the nuclear-armed neighbors.

"Especially after Galwan, there's a growing realization in New Delhi's elite circles that its increasingly difficult to trust China. They have broken more than four decades of agreements. Good trade ties are no guarantee of peace," said Rajagoplan. "They have time and again tried to interfere in other nations' foreign policy. But there's an agreement in India that China should not have a say in who our friends are."

With Washington indicating its willingness to back the region through an increased force deployment in Asia, the Malabar exercises may take on more importance.

"The Quad has always been a security platform but didn't have a military context to it," said Rajagopalan. "The Malabar exercises may give it just that thanks to China upping its ante and threatening the region's security."

--With assistance from Jason Scott.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/india-to-invite-australia-for-naval-drill-risking-china-ire-2260304
 
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By foreign affairs reporter Stephen Dziedzic and South Asia correspondent James Oaten

Posted 3ddays ago, updated Yesterday at 2:24pm

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Australia has been lobbying India to secure an invitation to the Malabar naval exercise.(Supplied: DoD/Chris Cavagnaro)

Australia looks almost certain to join key naval exercises with India, the United States and Japan as the four democracies tighten military cooperation to stare down a rising China.

Key points:
  • Canberra is working to deepen Australia's relationship with India and Japan
  • Both Japan and the US have been enthusiastic about Australia joining the exercise
  • Chinese assertiveness pushed nations closer together, a former Indian navy spokesperson said
The Australian Government has been pressing to join the Malabar naval exercise for more than five years, but has been repeatedly blocked by India.

But now, several Indian newspapers are reporting that the Modi Government has had a change of heart and will allow Australia to participate.

The Australian Government also believes India has shifted its position, with one senior source saying there were "very positive signs" an invitation will soon be formally issued.

Since 2017, Australia, India, Japan and the US have intensified cooperation through the "Quad" security dialogue, but expanding Malabar to include all four nations would give the grouping a sharper military edge.

It would also represent a substantial diplomatic and strategic victory for Australia.

Both Japan and the US have been enthusiastic about Australia joining the exercise.

But New Delhi has long harboured doubts about Australia’s commitment to defence cooperation, blaming it for the collapse of the first iteration of the Quad back in 2008.

India has also been wary of antagonising China, which has criticised the Quad and accused Washington of orchestrating a campaign to contain it.

Australian officials insist the Quad is not aimed at curbing China's rise but rather about building "patterns of cooperation" and "norms of behaviour" in the region.

But a New-Delhi-based defence analyst, Abhijnan Rej, said it was inevitable Malabar with Australia included would be seen as an attempt to contain China.

"India will never use the 'C word," Mr Rej said.

increasingly anxious about the US's commitment to Asia — is working to deepen Australia's relationship with both India and Japan.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has held virtual meetings with both Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in recent weeks.

India and Australia also elevated bilateral ties, signing a comprehensive strategic partnership and an agreement to allow reciprocal access to military bases.

Former spokesman for the Indian Navy, Retired Captain DK Sharma, told the ABC that including Australia in Malabar would create a coalition of "like-minded navies, like-minded democracies" across the Indo-Pacific.

Last month a brawl erupted between troops at a frontier post in the Galwan Valley, leaving 20 Indian soldiers dead. Beijing did not disclose how many casualties it sustained.
Jeff Smith from the Heritage Foundation said India had always "preferred to stay non-aligned" but "the constant threat from China has almost forced its hand".

"India has already forged the type of strategic bonds with the US to the point where they have multiple interoperability agreements, joint vision for the Indo-Pacific, growing number of arms sales, a very high volume and sophistication of military exercises," he said.

Ian Hall from the Griffith Asia Institute said India's anxiety about China's behaviour had "mounted in the past decade".

"New Delhi is also worried about the Chinese Navy operating in the Indian Ocean," Professor Hall said.

"This has led to discussions about closer cooperation with regional partners, including Australia, to maintain freedom of navigation, protect sea lanes, and if necessary, in a crisis, limit the ability of the PLA navy to operate freely in that area."

A spokesperson for the Australian Department of Defence said Australia had not yet received an invitation to Malabar, but stressed the benefits of the exercise.

"Australia sees value in participating in quadrilateral defence activities in order to increase interoperability and advance our collective interests in a free, open and prosperous Indo-Pacific region," they said.

Editor's note July 17, 2020: This article has been updated to clarify that it was not a decision of the Rudd government not to participate in the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue in 2008, but a decision made by the Howard government in 2007.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-07...s-japan-malabar-naval-exercise-china/12455576
 
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In a major development, Australia will be part of the annual Malabar exercises that will take place in Bay of Bengal and Arabian Sea in November.

Defence Ministry in a release said,"as India Seeks to increase cooperation with other countries in the maritime security domain and in the light of increased defence cooperation with Australia, Malabar 2020 will see the participation of the Australian Navy"

Malabar exercises will now have all 4 quad countries as part of the exercises - US, India, Japan and Australia. The announcement comes weeks after Quad country foreign ministers met in person in Tokyo.

The exercise will be ‘non-contact - at sea’ format and will "strengthen the coordination between the Navies of the participating countries", the Indian defence ministry release said.

In fact, Malabar exercises started in 1992 as a bilateral Indian Navy-US Navy exercise and Japan joined the exercises in 2015. In 2018, the exercise took place off the coast of Guam in the Philippine Sea, in 2019 off the coast the Japan.

The Indian Defence Ministry explained, "Participants of Exercise Malabar 2020 are engaging to enhance safety and security in the maritime domain."

Adding,"They collectively support free, open and inclusive Indo-Pacific and remain committed to a rules based international order."

The development will raise eyebrows in Beijing that sees coming together of Quad countries suspiciously.

 
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The alliance of Quad nations against China will do no harm to China. All of these nations rely heavily on Chinese trade, any disruption to it will cause an economic blow out to the Quad nations, whose fragile economics cannot sustain another slow down.
 
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Quad is touching China's red line, China has began to reduce trade with Australia. It will have large negative impact on Australia's 2020 and 2021 economy.

Australia enjoyed huge trade surplus with China in 2018, the outlooks are changing now.

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Quad is touching China's red line, China has began to reduce trade with Australia. It will have large negative impact on Australia's 2020 and 2021 economy.

Australia enjoyed huge trade surplus with China in 2018, the outlooks are changing now.

View attachment 680949

Who is China going to replace Australia with ? Canada ? USA ?
 
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when I saw the title, I knew it‘s from some Indian media. In their mind, the whole universe is eyeing/against China AND pro India. SO proud of it! lol
 
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Who is China going to replace Australia with ? Canada ? USA ?
nah... Iron ore, coal, wine, daily milk, fruits , crops, seafood and beef can be sourced from many other countries or even by expanding domestic production.

Bear in mind China imported $50 billion more than export in trade with Australia, mostly raw material and commodity. Aussies need the trade more than China.



 
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India, United States, Japan and Australia will hold a joint naval exercise from November 3 in the Bay of Bengal, appearing in it for the first time in a decade.

The Indian Navy, in a statement, said yesterday that the 24th edition of Malabar naval exercise is "scheduled in two phases in November. While the first phase involving participation by Indian Navy, United States Navy, Japan Maritime Self Defence Force and Royal Australian Navy (RAN) is set to commence off Visakhapatnam in Bay of Bengal" from November 3 to November 6, the second phase will be held in the Arabian Sea in the middle of next month.

The Malabar series of maritime exercises had commenced in 1992 as a bilateral India-US event and Japan joined it in 2015. The 2020 edition will now witness participation of Australia, the Indian Navy said.

Australia's presence for the first time is viewed with significance as all the four countries are members of a Quadrilateral Security Dialogue with an eye on China with which India has been involved in a nearly six-month old military standoff in eastern Ladakh, reports our New Delhi correspondent.

The phase-1 of Malabar will see the US coming with a guided-missile destroyer, Australia with a long range frigate with integral MH-60 helicopter, Japan with a destroyer with integral SH-60 helicopter and India with a destroyer, frigate, off-shore patrol vessel, fleet support ship and a submarine, Sindhuraj.


The first phase "would witness complex and advanced naval exercises including surface, anti-submarine and anti-air warfare operations and weapon firing exercises," the Indian Navy said.

In view of the Covid-19 pandemic, the Malabar exercise will be conducted as a "non-contact, at sea only" event and "will showcase the high-levels of synergy and coordination between the friendly navies which is based on their shared values and commitment to an open, inclusive Indo-Pacific and a rules-based international order," the Indian navy said.

 
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A Royal Australian Navy MH-60R Seahawk helicopter takes off from the guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain during Malabar drills in the Bay of Bengal, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020.

MARKUS CASTANEDA/U.S. NAVY

By CAITLIN DOORNBOS | STARS AND STRIPESPublished: November 3, 2020


YOKOSUKA NAVAL BASE, Japan — Warships from the U.S., India, Japan and Australia kicked off the Malabar 2020 naval exercise on Tuesday in the Bay of Bengal.

The guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain is representing the United States in the annual exercise, which “advances the planning, integration and employment of advanced warfare tactics between participating nations,” according to a Navy statement.

“Malabar provides an opportunity for like-minded navies, sharing a common vision of a more stable, open and prosperous Indo-Pacific, to operate and train alongside one another,” the ship’s commanding officer, Cmdr. Ryan T. Easterday, said in the statement.

The exercise begins as tensions mount between China and the four nations over Beijing’s territorial claims and militarization of islands and reefs in the South China Sea. India is also at odds with China over a dispute over a Himalayan section of the 2,100-mile-long border between the two.

“A collaborative approach toward regional security and stability is important now more than ever to deter all who challenge a free and open Indo-Pacific,” Easterday said in the statement.


The McCain is underway on its first deployment since its Aug. 21, 2017, collision that killed 10 sailors and caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damages. The ship underwent more than two years of repairs before becoming mission-ready in June.

Malabar 2020 is the destroyer’s first multinational exercise since its return to sea, 7th Fleet spokesman Lt. Joe Keiley told Stars and Stripes via email Tuesday.

Malabar 2020 also marks the first time in 13 years that Australian naval vessels are participating in the exercise, India’s Department of Defense said in a statement Oct. 19.

Malabar, launched by India and the U.S. in 1992, added Japan as a permanent partner in 2015. India invited Australia to participate this year “to increase cooperation with other countries in the maritime security domain and in light of increased defense cooperation with Australia,” according to the ministry statement.

Royal Australian Navy Cmdr. Antony Pisani, skipper of the frigate HMAS Ballarat, said his crew looked forward to “contribut(ing) to the security, stability and prosperity of the region” with the exercise, according to the Navy statement.

“This is an opportunity for Ballarat to participate in a high-end maritime exercise with the four participating navies, increasing mutual understanding and enhancing our combined air and maritime domain awareness,” he said.

Also participating in the exercise from the Indian Navy are the tanker INS Shakti, destroyer INS Ranvijay, multirole frigate INS Shivalik, submarine INS Sindhuraj and various aircraft. The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force dispatched the destroyer JS Ōnami, according to the Navy statement.

The statement did not indicate how long the exercise would last. Malabar 2019 ran for nine days.

 
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Is this naval show off intend to threaten or intimidate India immediate neighbours Bangladesh, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Indonesia?
China is not impressed.
:coffee: :sarcastic:
 
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BTW isn't USS McCain the same destoyer that almost sunk killing many US sailor of the coast of Singapore a few years ago in a collision with a Tanker.
 
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  • Our Bureau
  • 02:04 PM, November 16, 2020
  • 507

Indian, US Aircraft Carriers to Practice High Intensity Naval Ops in Malabar Exercise

Indian, US, Australian, Japanese Navy ships during Malabar 2020 exercise


Phase 2 of Malabar 2020 naval exercise will witness joint operations, centered around the Indian Navy’s Vikramaditya Carrier Battle Group and Nimitz Carrier Strike Group of the US Navy.

The two carriers, along with other ships, submarine and aircraft of the participating navies, would be engaged in high intensity naval operations over four days from November 17-20 in the Northern Arabian Sea.

These exercises include cross-deck flying operations and advanced air defence exercises by MIG 29K fighters of Vikramaditya and F-18 fighters besides E2C Hawkeye from the Nimitz. In addition, advanced surface and anti-submarine warfare exercises, seamanship evolutions and weapon firings will also be undertaken to further enhance inter-operability and synergy between the four friendly navies.

In addition to Vikramaditya and its fighter and helicopter air-wings, indigenous destroyers Kolkata and Chennai, stealth frigate Talwar, Fleet Support Ship Deepak and integral helicopters will also participate in the exercise, led by Rear Admiral Krishna Swaminathan, Flag Officer Commanding Western Fleet.

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Indigenously built submarine Khanderi and P8I maritime reconnaissance aircraft of the Indian Navy will also showcase their capabilities during the exercise
The second phase will take forward the synergy achieved in the recently concluded Phase 1 of Exercise Malabar 2020, which was conducted in the Bay of Bengal from 03 to 06 November 2020, this phase will involve coordinated operations of increasing complexity between the navies of Australia, India, Japan and the United States.
US Navy’s Strike Carrier Nimitz will be accompanied by cruiser Princeton and destroyer Sterett in addition to P8A maritime reconnaissance aircraft. The Royal Australian Navy will be represented by frigate Ballarat along with its integral helicopter. The Japanese Navy will also participate in the exercise.

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Large surface ships will last as long as Armenian tanks in the next big naval war.
 
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