PLAN Anti-Piracy Deployments

Indigo

Just Hatched
Registered Member
Re: Somali pirates and Chinese navy

Absalon did not retain the pirates because they threw the evidence for piracy overboard before they were ceased. Absalon carries a contingent of frogmen as a part of the anti-piracy operation.
 

Judgement Day

New Member
Re: Somali pirates and Chinese navy

  GULF OF ADEN, Feb. 26 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese naval vessel rescued an Italian merchant ship from approaching pirates in the Gulf of Aden off Somalia on Thursday.

  Destroyer "Haikou" of the Chinese navy received a SOS from the Liberia-flagged Italian ship around 10:03 a.m. reporting two unidentified yachts were approaching just about 3 to 4 nautical miles away.

  A ship borne helicopter with three combatants and one photographer on board was immediately sent to the scene.

  "When our helicopter reached the area, the two yachts were already close to the merchant ship. They were equipped with two engines and were traveling with high speed," said Captain Chen Yi.

  Hovering around the Italian ship "LIA," the Chinese helicopter fired two flares as a warning to scare the yachts away.

  Two minutes later, the Italian merchant ship sent a message to thank the Chinese naval ship.

  It was the second time that the Chinese naval fleet rescued foreign merchant ships. On Jan. 29, another missile destroyer "Wuhan" successfully rescued a Greek ship from pirates.
 

UCSDAE

New Member
Re: Somali pirates and Chinese navy

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Interesting article by UPI on Chinese naval strategy and implication of the Somalia deployment.

HONG KONG, Feb. 27 (UPI) -- In the future, wherever Chinese merchant ships go, that area may be taken as China's national interest frontier and the trace of the "Chinese Aegis" class DDG may appear. Moreover, this theory gives the People's Republic of China a more convincing rationale for building its own aircraft carriers.

Clearly, the conventional Western analysis that the People's Liberation Army navy is following a progressive defense path by trying to first secure the waters within the "first island chain" -- the stretch of islands running parallel to China's coast, including Japan's Ryukyu Islands, Taiwan and the northern Philippines -- and then proceeding to the "second island chain" -- bordered by Guam, northern Australia and Indonesia -- is out of date.

Which island chain includes the coastline of Somalia? China's concept of a national interest frontier is not just a theoretical discussion. It is founded on the actual demands of combat operations. The People's Liberation Army Daily carried another article on Dec. 2, 2008, titled "Abandoning the Doctrine of Peaceful Military Build-up and Preparing for Military Confrontation That May Break Out Anytime." This caught the attention of Western military observers.

The belligerent wording in this treatise, at a time when tensions in the Taiwan Strait have greatly eased, has confused and worried analysts. Why did the author openly advocate preparations for military conflict at such a moment? Conflict with whom?

"Unless China is in possession of a credible core capability to win a regional war in the information era, China will not have the fundamental ability to accomplish other military missions," the article warned. "For China, although the possibility of a large-scale foreign invasion can be excluded, the danger of involvement in a regional war, military conflict and the interference of a superior opponent has never decreased," it said.

From the perspective of Chinese military strategists, China no longer has any national interest frontier, because all corners of the planet have established ties with China through trade. Chinese merchant ships are already navigating the waters of the four great oceans and have reached all parts of the five continents. This is an advantage that the Soviet Union did not have in earlier years.

In Africa, China is already the continent's third-largest trading partner, after the United States and France. In 2006 China's trade with Africa broke the $50 billion mark. It is critically important that Africa's natural resources provide a lifeline to China's economy.

China has been providing large quantities of Chinese-made weapons and military equipment to many countries in Africa, as this writer has described in earlier articles published by United Press International. Many of these were traded for oil.

(Part 3: Why China's commodities and oil imports from Latin America and Africa will require a global power projection capability and continued protection by the growing Chinese navy)(Not published at this time)
 
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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
Re: Somali pirates and Chinese navy

Chinese merchant ship attacked by pirates.

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Chinese cargo ship Yandanghai, is seen near Weishanhu, a supply ship of the Chinese naval fleet on an anti-piracy escort mission in the Gulf of Aden off Somalia in this photo taken on February 25, 2009. The ship was attacked by a group of pirates February 25 in the Gulf and two crew members were injured. A patrolling Danish naval ship got an SOS and helped fight off the pirates' attack. The Chinese naval fleet then escorted the ship to the safe area and sent medical aid to it. [chinadaily.com.cn/Wang Hui]
 

hao903

Banned Idiot
Re: Somali pirates and Chinese navy

what about these rumours of how I hear the Indians want to figure out the signals of the phased array.

I read somewhere they'd even go as far as getting some MKIs with Brahmos to lock on , 'forcing' the DDG radars to 'open up'.

=/

hao903, read the forum rules. Follow the link below;
http://www.sinodefenceforum.com/ann...-before-posting-important-please-read-20.html


bd popeye super moderator
 
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flyzies

Junior Member
Re: Somali pirates and Chinese navy

what about these rumours of how I hear the Indians want to figure out the signals of the phased array.

I read somewhere they'd even go as far as getting some MKIs with Brahmos to lock on , 'forcing' the DDG radars to 'open up'.

=/

Would you kindly elaborate, and tell us the source of this news?
 
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SteelBird

Colonel
Re: Somali pirates and Chinese navy

Would you kindly elaborate, and tell us the source of this news?

I think our new friend has used some harsh words "d**n", kindly remind him not to do that again, 'coz we are civilized people. For the source of the claim that Indian would use its MKI with Bramos to force PLAN to turn on its radar, I also read that from sina.com. It was sometime about the rumors (sorry, for I can't get confirmed whether this event is true or false, so I call it rumor) about PLAN vessels cornered and forced an IN Kilo to surface. However, the article said that some Indian officers said "...by all means including using... in order to force...". I read this as someone's personal opinion rather than they have decide to do so, nor have they done so. Further, it's the author's speculation. The source can't be confirmed. So, don't take it too serious unless you have credible source.
 

Scyth

Junior Member
Re: Somali pirates and Chinese navy

found this one:
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Edit: idk why the link is so weird

What would be the appopriate action if this situation happens? Ignore them MKI and continue whatever you were doing? And could some1 provide me with a short english summary because my chinese isn't very good
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
Re: Somali pirates and Chinese navy

what about these rumours of how I hear the Indians want to figure out the signals of the phased array.

I read somewhere they'd even go as far as getting some MKIs with Brahmos to lock on , 'forcing' the DDG radars to 'open up'.

=/

Unlikely, as if the Indians did that, then the PLAN would be well within their rights to shoot the MKIs out of the sky, and I have little doubt most captains would do just that if their ships were locked on by potentially hostile fighters.
 
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