Thursday, February 8, 2018

PLA : China Eyes 18 Overseas Naval Bases (R)

SOURCE:
http://www.sunday-guardian.com/analysis/china-eyes-18-overseas-naval-bases




GEOPOLITICS


       China Eyes 18 Overseas Naval Bases
                                BY
               MONIKA CHANSORIA




                             https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gE1iI5cWsPw



These developments are in sync with China’s much

 pronounced Maritime Silk Route strategy.


With the recent challenging of the notion of the 
Indian Ocean Region (IOR) being India's "strategic 
backyard", China is gradually upping the ante in the 
maritime realm around India — a traditional 
strategic nerve centre for New Delhi. Beijing is 
sending a tacit signal, wherein it "recognises India's 
special role in stabilising the strategic Indian 
Ocean Region, but the perception that it is India's 
'backyard' may result in clashes..."


The caution thrown in by China needs to be read in 
conjunction with the cumulative maritime activity of
 the PLA Navy (PLAN) and its mounting forays into 
the Indian Ocean — the third largest water body in 
the world. The expanding strategic naval footprint in
 the Indian Ocean by means of acquiring more 
maritime bases and berthing facilities is a core 
pillar of China's ports Policy. The PLAN's presence 
and deployment in the IOR have been on the rise 
since 2014, when a Song-class conventional 
submarine docked in the Colombo harbour along
 with a Ming-class diesel-electric nuclear submarine.
 Striking, was the fact, that the submarine docked at 
Colombo's South Container Terminal that is built, 
run, and controlled by China Merchants Holdings — 
thereby raising queries as to why did it not choose to 
dock at the Sri Lanka port Authority in Colombo,
 which is mandated to accommodate foreign military
 vessels? The emphasis to dock at a minuscule 
"Chinese facility" well within a Sri Lankan 
administered harbour, merits careful analysis.


Given its strategic placement, Sri Lanka is fast
 becoming the pivot of rising Chinese naval 
presence in the IOR, in that, China also has a 
substantial controlling stake in the Hambantota 
port, withColombo agreeing to grant Chinese state-
ownedcompanies operating rights to as many as 
four berths in exchange for an easing of loan 
conditions.Besides, there are unconfirmed reports
 of construction of a Chinese-run aircraft 
maintenance facility near Hambantota in order to 
service PLAAF assets based in Sri Lanka. In 
neighbouring Pakistan, the docking of a Chinese 
submarine in Karachi, following the handing over of 
the port's operational control to China Overseas port
 Holdings is another step towards consolidating 
Chinese permanent navalpresence in South Asia.


These developments, significantly, are in sync with 
China's much pronounced Maritime Silk Route 
strategy — a prominent feature of the upcoming 13th 
Five-Year Plan (2016-2020). The maritime route is a 
proposed sea network of ports, coastal 
infrastructure projects beginning in Quanzhou in 
the Fujian province and culminating in the northern
 Mediterranean Sea. By virtue of this fresh strategy, 
Beijing seeks to gain greater access to the strategic 
pathways of the Indian Ocean, alleviated access to 
the Gulf oil — which consequently shall reduce its 
dependence on the passage through the Straits of 
Malacca — a key potential vulnerability for China in
 the event of a future conflict.


China recognises fully well that in order to boost its 
naval power projection capability, it will have to gain
 greater access to ports and berthing facilities. This 
is being increasingly reflected with China's covert 
strategy of granting huge loans to smaller coastal 
island nations that are in dire need for 
developmental funds to improve infrastructure. The
 pattern that China is following, almost unvaryingly 
for handing out these loans, is that there are "no 
conditions and/or transparency measures" while 
issuing the loan. As soon as the island nation in 
question reaches the stage where it is unable to
 repay the loan on time, China thereafter "offers" to 
"waive off/relax" loan conditions in exchange for a 
"few berths" for that particular naval facility. The 
Maldivian project is a case in point, in which China 
is developing the iHavan Integrated Development 
Project in the northernmost main sea line of 
communication joining Southeast Asia and China to
 West Asia and Europe. The iHavan project is riding
 on huge concessional loans/aid financing from 
China and it is being forecast that Maldives shall 
almost certainly default on payments, thereby 
allowing China to seize a few berthing facilities 
there.


This pattern could well be adopted in the future with 

many other countries, especially since official 

Chinese publications including Xinhua have 

advocated and "advised" the PLA Navy to build as 

many as 18 overseas naval military bases in the 

greater Indian Ocean area, possibly including: 


Chongjin port (North Korea), 

Moresby port (Papua New Guinea),

Sihanoukville port (Cambodia),

Koh Lanta port (Thailand), 

Sittwe port (Myanmar), 

Dhaka port (Bangladesh), 

Gwadar port (Pakistan),

 Hambantota port (Sri Lanka),

 Maldives,

 Seychelles, 

Djibouti port (Djibouti),

 Lagos port (Nigeria), 

Mombasa port (Kenya), 

Dar-es-Salaam port (Tanzania),

 Luanda port (Angola) and the

 Walvis Bay port (Namibia).







The long shadow of China's ports policy in the Indian

 Ocean being currently driven and characterised by 

both, state- and private-sponsored "infrastructure 

investment", foretells strategic ramifications 

militarily as these facilities shall end up becoming 

communication and surveillance facilities, in 

addition to being repair and replenishment centres 

for the Chinese Navy — underscoring the 

intransigent course of Beijing's influence in South 

Asia and the Indian Ocean.





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