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With Pricey Naval Revamp, Bangladesh Can’t Afford to Fail

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Bangladesh is one of the world’s poorest countries. But can it afford not to revamp its fledgling Navy?

By Andrew Detsch
November 22, 2013

The tangled avenues of metropolitan Chittagong reveal an abundance of contradictions. On the eastern edge of Bangladesh’s economic capital, rickshaw-laden streets and the dense slum districts, such as Moti Jharna, give way to hulking, maize-colored cranes and endless rows of shipping containers. These massive hoists process hundreds of tons of grain, cement, and sugar at the Chittagong port each day, responsible for 80 percent of the country’s trade. Beyond them the, Bangladeshi navy’s prized frigate, BNS Bangabandhu, stands at the ready in the Karnaphuli River estuary. Named for founding father Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the ship is not only a symbol of Bangladesh’s rapid naval modernization, but also of the increasing militarization of the surrounding Bay of Bengal.

“As a poor developing country, Bangladesh is likely to face many ongoing political and economic challenges in fulfilling its naval modernization agenda,” Sergei DeSilva-Ranasinghe, a visiting fellow at the University of Canberra told The Diplomat in an interview. Bengalis are among the world’s poorest citizens. GDP per capita stands at $848, and 31.5 percent of Bangladesh’s 153 million inhabitants live below the poverty line, according to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). Eight million Bengalis survive on less than a dollar a day, and rapid urbanization has caused massive overcrowding. The country’s six largest cities housed 9,048 slums in 2005. That number continues to rise.

Still, for Bangladesh, modernizing the fledgling navy to defend its 700-kilometer coastline is a matter of economic survival. With 90 percent of Bangladeshi trade dependent on sea lines of communication (SLOCs), and vulnerable to maritime threats from India and Myanmar, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina embarked upon an expensive $490 billion revamp of the navy in 2010. India successfully blockaded the Bay of Bengal during the Indo-Pakistani war of 1971, just before Bangladesh won its independence, and, if it chose to, New Delhi could inflict grave economic damage again with another such barrier.

The Bay of Bengal hardly comes up on the Asia-Pacific’s long register of political-military flashpoints, but with major oil discoveries in the region, “tensions over mining rights located along the shared maritime boundaries have escalated the stakes,” DeSilva notes. The oft-ignored region has garnered a flood of foreign direct investment: Thai investors have underwritten Myanmar’s Dawei project to the tune of $8.5 billion. China eyes Cox’s Bazar, just to the south of Chittagong at Bangladesh’s southernmost tip, as a future foothold in the bay, investing $200 million to build an airport there.

But Bangladesh’s attempts at naval modernization long predate the infusion of foreign money by over a decade. The country began an impressive buildup in 2001, commissioning Korean-made frigate BNS Bangabandhu(once BNS Khalid Bin Walid), before ordering seven new warships, three British manufactured offshore patrol vessels, two Korean fast attack craft in 2004, and upgrading two frigates with anti-ship surface-to-surface missiles (SSM) in 2006.

Hasina’s focus on maritime access has meant heavy investment in patrol craft and smaller warships, including the acquisition of re-commissioned British surveying vessel HMS Roebuck, along with a hydrographic vessel and two ex-Royal Navy Castle-class corvettes later in 2010. Hasina also provided funding for the Bengali Naval Academy and the Navy’s Special Warfare and Diving Salvage (SWADS) unit. The ruling Bangladesh Awami League (BAL) capped off the spending spree in 2012 by purchasing two Chinese built Type 053 “Jiangwei II” Class guided-missile frigates for $200 million each, and hopes to acquire three more.

The navy is stronger than ever: its five frigates headline a force comprising 85 warships, 19,000 personnel, and three regional commands – well equipped to handle piracy, trafficking, and maritime crime incursions that threaten Bengali commerce. But forHasina and the BAL,all those goals are for naught without a credible submarine threat. “The Bangladesh navy’s attempt to create a submarine arm constitutes the apex of its naval modernization program,” DeSilva notes.

The government has set specific targets for the program, hoping to complete submarine base facilities by 2019 and build a “three-dimensional” deterrent force by 2021, adding an underwater fleet to compliment surface and naval air components. Additionally, two diesel-electric subs could be on the way from China shortly. Still, although the acquisition of a submarine would represent the “most significant deterrent to both India and Myanmar,” as DeSilva suggests, it is “perhaps the most likely project to be affected should budget constraints prevail.”

Bangladesh may never be able to match rival India’s naval might tit-for-tat. The world’s largest democracy maintains an economy nearly sixteen times the size of Dhaka’s, and New Delhi has made investment in the Indian navy, the seventh largest in the world, a priority. The service boasts 55,000 personnel, 14 frigates, and 15 attack submarines, one of which, the nuclear-powered INS Chakra (S71) is on loan from Russia until 2022.

Before the loan expires, however, India will complete six more French Scorpéne-class attack subs between 2016 and 2019 at Mazagon Dock in Mumbai, and plans to build seven upgraded Shivalik-class stealth frigates, the successor to the staple Talwar-class. Myanmar, which is having its $120 million Sittwe deep water port project underwritten by Indian investors, has three of its own frigates, including two ex-PLA Navy Type 53H1s, stationed in the Bay

But Hasina is resorting to other measures to defend her turf. “Bangladesh is not playing a zero-sum game with India or Myanmar, but it is nonetheless seriously asserting its agenda,” DeSilva points out. Unable to command military supremacy in the bay, Dhaka has sought to defend its 700-kilometer coastline by seeking international arbitration on territorial claims: it won rights to a 200-mile exclusiveeconomic zone (EEZ) from Myanmar at the UN’s International Tribunal on the Laws of the Sea (ITLOS) last year. Bengali accusations that India is falsely laying claim to 19,000km2 of its maritime domain, a hydrocarbon-rich slice of real estate, are pending a final decision from an international arbiter next year.

That is a piecemeal strategy, and may not be enough to defend Bangladesh’s interests. But Hasina and her admirals should not hope to match New Delhi’s dynamic naval force structure. So far, the strategy has proven a success in many ways. “Bangladesh is increasing its capacity to resist potential foreign naval aggression, should it arise,” DeSilva notes. Indeed, a deterrent force is not meant to overpower the Indian fleet, but to prove that Bangladesh can inflict enough damage to make conflict a losing proposition. To sustain that force for the long haul, Hasina must begin to resolve Bangladesh’s economic contradictions in earnest. With slum dwellings continuing to populate Chittagong’s hillsides, that will be an increasingly difficult task.

With Pricey Naval Revamp, Bangladesh Can’t Afford to Fail | The Diplomat




PROBABLY ONE OF THE DUMBEST ARTICLE EVER WRITTEN ON BANGLADESH


 
Bangladesh is one of the world’s poorest countries. But can it afford not to revamp its fledgling Navy?

By Andrew Detsch
November 22, 2013

The tangled avenues of metropolitan Chittagong reveal an abundance of contradictions. On the eastern edge of Bangladesh’s economic capital, rickshaw-laden streets and the dense slum districts, such as Moti Jharna, give way to hulking, maize-colored cranes and endless rows of shipping containers. These massive hoists process hundreds of tons of grain, cement, and sugar at the Chittagong port each day, responsible for 80 percent of the country’s trade. Beyond them the, Bangladeshi navy’s prized frigate, BNS Bangabandhu, stands at the ready in the Karnaphuli River estuary. Named for founding father Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the ship is not only a symbol of Bangladesh’s rapid naval modernization, but also of the increasing militarization of the surrounding Bay of Bengal.

“As a poor developing country, Bangladesh is likely to face many ongoing political and economic challenges in fulfilling its naval modernization agenda,” Sergei DeSilva-Ranasinghe, a visiting fellow at the University of Canberra told The Diplomat in an interview. Bengalis are among the world’s poorest citizens. GDP per capita stands at $848, and 31.5 percent of Bangladesh’s 153 million inhabitants live below the poverty line, according to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). Eight million Bengalis survive on less than a dollar a day, and rapid urbanization has caused massive overcrowding. The country’s six largest cities housed 9,048 slums in 2005. That number continues to rise.

Still, for Bangladesh, modernizing the fledgling navy to defend its 700-kilometer coastline is a matter of economic survival. With 90 percent of Bangladeshi trade dependent on sea lines of communication (SLOCs), and vulnerable to maritime threats from India and Myanmar, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina embarked upon an expensive $490 billion revamp of the navy in 2010. India successfully blockaded the Bay of Bengal during the Indo-Pakistani war of 1971, just before Bangladesh won its independence, and, if it chose to, New Delhi could inflict grave economic damage again with another such barrier.

The Bay of Bengal hardly comes up on the Asia-Pacific’s long register of political-military flashpoints, but with major oil discoveries in the region, “tensions over mining rights located along the shared maritime boundaries have escalated the stakes,” DeSilva notes. The oft-ignored region has garnered a flood of foreign direct investment: Thai investors have underwritten Myanmar’s Dawei project to the tune of $8.5 billion. China eyes Cox’s Bazar, just to the south of Chittagong at Bangladesh’s southernmost tip, as a future foothold in the bay, investing $200 million to build an airport there.

But Bangladesh’s attempts at naval modernization long predate the infusion of foreign money by over a decade. The country began an impressive buildup in 2001, commissioning Korean-made frigate BNS Bangabandhu(once BNS Khalid Bin Walid), before ordering seven new warships, three British manufactured offshore patrol vessels, two Korean fast attack craft in 2004, and upgrading two frigates with anti-ship surface-to-surface missiles (SSM) in 2006.

Hasina’s focus on maritime access has meant heavy investment in patrol craft and smaller warships, including the acquisition of re-commissioned British surveying vessel HMS Roebuck, along with a hydrographic vessel and two ex-Royal Navy Castle-class corvettes later in 2010. Hasina also provided funding for the Bengali Naval Academy and the Navy’s Special Warfare and Diving Salvage (SWADS) unit. The ruling Bangladesh Awami League (BAL) capped off the spending spree in 2012 by purchasing two Chinese built Type 053 “Jiangwei II” Class guided-missile frigates for $200 million each, and hopes to acquire three more.

The navy is stronger than ever: its five frigates headline a force comprising 85 warships, 19,000 personnel, and three regional commands – well equipped to handle piracy, trafficking, and maritime crime incursions that threaten Bengali commerce. But forHasina and the BAL,all those goals are for naught without a credible submarine threat. “The Bangladesh navy’s attempt to create a submarine arm constitutes the apex of its naval modernization program,” DeSilva notes.

The government has set specific targets for the program, hoping to complete submarine base facilities by 2019 and build a “three-dimensional” deterrent force by 2021, adding an underwater fleet to compliment surface and naval air components. Additionally, two diesel-electric subs could be on the way from China shortly. Still, although the acquisition of a submarine would represent the “most significant deterrent to both India and Myanmar,” as DeSilva suggests, it is “perhaps the most likely project to be affected should budget constraints prevail.”

Bangladesh may never be able to match rival India’s naval might tit-for-tat. The world’s largest democracy maintains an economy nearly sixteen times the size of Dhaka’s, and New Delhi has made investment in the Indian navy, the seventh largest in the world, a priority. The service boasts 55,000 personnel, 14 frigates, and 15 attack submarines, one of which, the nuclear-powered INS Chakra (S71) is on loan from Russia until 2022.

Before the loan expires, however, India will complete six more French Scorpéne-class attack subs between 2016 and 2019 at Mazagon Dock in Mumbai, and plans to build seven upgraded Shivalik-class stealth frigates, the successor to the staple Talwar-class. Myanmar, which is having its $120 million Sittwe deep water port project underwritten by Indian investors, has three of its own frigates, including two ex-PLA Navy Type 53H1s, stationed in the Bay

But Hasina is resorting to other measures to defend her turf. “Bangladesh is not playing a zero-sum game with India or Myanmar, but it is nonetheless seriously asserting its agenda,” DeSilva points out. Unable to command military supremacy in the bay, Dhaka has sought to defend its 700-kilometer coastline by seeking international arbitration on territorial claims: it won rights to a 200-mile exclusiveeconomic zone (EEZ) from Myanmar at the UN’s International Tribunal on the Laws of the Sea (ITLOS) last year. Bengali accusations that India is falsely laying claim to 19,000km2 of its maritime domain, a hydrocarbon-rich slice of real estate, are pending a final decision from an international arbiter next year.

That is a piecemeal strategy, and may not be enough to defend Bangladesh’s interests. But Hasina and her admirals should not hope to match New Delhi’s dynamic naval force structure. So far, the strategy has proven a success in many ways. “Bangladesh is increasing its capacity to resist potential foreign naval aggression, should it arise,” DeSilva notes. Indeed, a deterrent force is not meant to overpower the Indian fleet, but to prove that Bangladesh can inflict enough damage to make conflict a losing proposition. To sustain that force for the long haul, Hasina must begin to resolve Bangladesh’s economic contradictions in earnest. With slum dwellings continuing to populate Chittagong’s hillsides, that will be an increasingly difficult task.

With Pricey Naval Revamp, Bangladesh Can’t Afford to Fail | The Diplomat




PROBABLY ONE OF THE DUMBEST ARTICLE EVER WRITTEN ON BANGLADESH

It is full of wrong info, The author does not have proper knowledge on BD, oh well now a days u do not need knowledge for making a report.
 
It is full of wrong info, The author does not have proper knowledge on BD, oh well now a days u do not need knowledge for making a report.

1.Every nation knows what is best for her.She herself can organize her household expenses allotting priorities.

2. BD has adopted The Doctrine of Traditional People's Defense where everything/everyone will be involved in a patriotic war should there be an aggression on us. BN's immediate objective is to be able to secure our EEZ.Eventually BN's reach would reach the Andaman Sea and Vyzag off-shore. Thereafter, PLAN, Indonesian Navy and even PN would tackle any maritime aggression against us.
 
Still, for Bangladesh, modernizing the fledgling navy to defend its 700-kilometer coastline is a matter of economic survival. With 90 percent of Bangladeshi trade dependent on sea lines of communication (SLOCs), and vulnerable to maritime threats from India and Myanmar, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina embarked upon an expensive $490 billion revamp of the navy in 2010. India successfully blockaded the Bay of Bengal during the Indo-Pakistani war of 1971, just before Bangladesh won its independence, and, if it chose to, New Delhi could inflict grave economic damage again with another such barrier.

WOW :lol:

2. BD has adopted The Doctrine of Traditional People's Defense where everything/everyone will be involved in a patriotic war should there be an aggression on us. BN's immediate objective is to be able to secure our EEZ.Eventually BN's reach would reach the Andaman Sea and Vyzag off-shore. Thereafter, PLAN, Indonesian Navy and even PN would tackle any maritime aggression against us.

DOUBLE WOW :lol:
 
2. BD has adopted The Doctrine of Traditional People's Defense where everything/everyone will be involved in a patriotic war should there be an aggression on us. BN's immediate objective is to be able to secure our EEZ.Eventually BN's reach would reach the Andaman Sea and Vyzag off-shore. Thereafter, PLAN, Indonesian Navy and even PN would tackle any maritime aggression against us.
You are yet to get out of your Islamist dreams arent you.
If India wages war against Bangladesh..
PLAN/PLA never interfere in a war that India is waging.
Pakistan found it out quite sadly at the last moment when they expected China to swoop in repeatedly and save them!
Indonesia would never dream of going against India. Indonesia has a very close cultural relation with India.

Lastly Pakistani's dont go to aid anyone except the Arabs. And even if they did try, their Navy is not much better than the Indian Coast Guard.

If India wages war against Bangladesh...it would be wrapped up by India in 48 hours.
 
1.Every nation knows what is best for her.She herself can organize her household expenses allotting priorities.

2. BD has adopted The Doctrine of Traditional People's Defense where everything/everyone will be involved in a patriotic war should there be an aggression on us. BN's immediate objective is to be able to secure our EEZ.Eventually BN's reach would reach the Andaman Sea and Vyzag off-shore. Thereafter, PLAN, Indonesian Navy and even PN would tackle any maritime aggression against us.

Too much self-importance. Why would they sacrifice their men and material for you guys. Best to remain our loyal dalal and enjoy development, hasinaji recently inauguarated metro project with DMRC.:-)
 
You are yet to get out of your Islamist dreams arent you.
If India wages war against Bangladesh..
PLAN/PLA never interfere in a war that India is waging.
Pakistan found it out quite sadly at the last moment when they expected China to swoop in repeatedly and save them!
Indonesia would never dream of going against India. Indonesia has a very close cultural relation with India.

Lastly Pakistani's dont go to aid anyone except the Arabs. And even if they did try, their Navy is not much better than the Indian Coast Guard.

If India wages war against Bangladesh...it would be wrapped up by India in 48 hours.

There is something called "proxy war". China is predicted to surpass US military in near future, do you really think they can achieve such feat without having major influence in Indian Ocean? And when we talk about Indian Ocean, Bay of Bengal is the next big thing which is well documented.
 
Bangladesh may never be able to match rival India’s naval might tit-for-tat. The world’s largest democracy maintains an economy nearly sixteen times the size of Dhaka’s, and New Delhi has made investment in the Indian navy, the seventh largest in the world, a priority. The service boasts 55,000 personnel, 14 frigates, and 15 attack submarines, one of which, the nuclear-powered INS Chakra (S71) is on loan from Russia until 2022.

When did we tried to match Indian military supremacy . even in dream country like bangladesh cannot match indian growing military power . what our govt trying is to keep minimum deterrent capability against any aggression .
 
I think BD can easily afford 4 Super Carriers, 7 LPDs, 2 Cruisers, 11 SSBN, 18 SSN, 25 scorpenes, 45 Frigates & 39 destroyers in the short term (2015).

After that BD can easily expand to 10 Super Carriers, 17 LPDs, 4 Cruisers, 21 SSBN, 30 SSN, 35 scorpenes, 65 Frigates & 59 destroyers in the medium term (2018).

WAY TO GO!!!! :tup:
 
I think BD can easily afford 4 Super Carriers, 7 LPDs, 2 Cruisers, 11 SSBN, 18 SSN, 25 scorpenes, 45 Frigates & 39 destroyers in the short term (2015).

After that BD can easily expand to 10 Super Carriers, 17 LPDs, 4 Cruisers, 21 SSBN, 30 SSN, 35 scorpenes, 65 Frigates & 59 destroyers in the medium term (2018).

WAY TO GO!!!! :tup:
Well with half a TRILLION USD burning a hole in their pocket, I don't see why not:

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina embarked upon an expensive $490 billion revamp of the navy in 2010.

:D
 
Did anyone else notice this???!! :cheesy::cheesy:


Oops!

That's even more than the entire country's GDP :omghaha:

He probably meant million, not billion. LOL...

I've noticed a lot of poor quality articles coming form the likes of The Diplomat and Jane's. Recession hitting them? :cheesy:
 
That's even more than the entire country's GDP :omghaha:

He probably meant million, not billion. LOL...

I've noticed a lot of poor quality articles coming form the likes of The Diplomat and Jane's. Recession hitting them? :cheesy:
Indeed. But you'd have thought such a glaring error would be picked up in even the breifest of read throughs.
 
Bangladesh is one of the world’s poorest countries. But can it afford not to revamp its fledgling Navy?

Still, for Bangladesh, modernizing the fledgling navy to defend its 700-kilometer coastline is a matter of economic survival. With 90 percent of Bangladeshi trade dependent on sea lines of communication (SLOCs), and vulnerable to maritime threats from India and Myanmar, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina embarked upon an expensive $490 billion revamp of the navy in 2010. India successfully blockaded the Bay of Bengal during the Indo-Pakistani war of 1971, just before Bangladesh won its independence, and, if it chose to, New Delhi could inflict grave economic damage again with another such barrier.

Ironically it was the naval blockade of 1971 which helped Bangladesh win its independence. With naval blockade West Pakistan would have kept its supply line going and would have easily put down any rebellion by East Pakistanis and would have put up a stiff resistance against Indian Army too.

Poor article.
 
Indian has no interest in blocking sea lanes to Bangladesh even in dreams, what are they going to achieve doing this to a friendly nation
 
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