PLAN overseas deployment and excercises a list

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
Here it is 21st task force

The guided-missile frigate Sanya sets sail from a naval port in Sanya of the Hainan province on the morning of August 4, 2015.

  SANYA, August 5 (ChinaMil) -- The 21st Chinese naval escort taskforce departed on Tuesday morning from Sanya, a port city in south China's Hainan province, and headed for the Gulf of Aden and waters off the Somali coast. It will replace the 20th escort taskforce to continue the escort mission.

  Chief of Staff of the PLA Navy Vice Adm. Qiu Yanpeng attended the send-off ceremony at the wharf. He said that since December 26, 2008, the navy has successively dispatched 20 taskforces to fulfill the escort missions in the Gulf of Aden and waters off the Somali coast, fully demonstrating the image of China as a responsible country.

  The 21st escort taskforce of the PLA navy is composed of three ships from the South China Sea Fleet. They are the guided-missile frigate Liuzhou (hull number 573), the guided-missile frigate Sanya (hull number 574) and the comprehensive supply ship Qianghaihu (hull number 885). The taskforce carries two ship-borne helicopters, dozens of commandos and more than 700 officers and men.

  It is the maiden escort voyage to the Gulf of Aden for the two frigates while it is the fourth time for the supply ship Qinghaihu to join the escort taskforce.

  Rear Adm. Yu Manjiang, deputy chief of staff of the South China Sea Fleet, acts as the commanding officer of the taskforce.
 

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
Ok here's all 21 missions

1st Escort Flotilla

DDG 170, DDG 169 and Tanker 887

2nd Escort Flotilla

DDG 167, FFG 570 and Tanker 887

3rd Escort Flotilla

FFG 529, FFG 530 and Tanker 886

4th Escort Flotilla

FFG 525, FFG 526, FFG 568 and Tanker 886

5th Escort Flotilla

DDG 168, FFG 568 and Tanker 887

6th Escort Flotilla

LPD 998, DDG 171 and Tanker 887

7th Escort Flotilla

FFG 529, FFG 530 and Tanker 886

8th Escort Flotilla

FFG 525, FFG 526 and Tanker 886

9th Escort Flotilla

DDG 169, FFG 569 and Tanker 885

10th Escort Flotilla

DDG 171, FFG 571 and Tanker 885

11th Escort Flotilla

DDG 113, FFG 538 and Tanker 887

12th Escort Flotilla

FFG 548, FFG 549 and Tanker 886

13th Escort Flotilla

FFG 568, FFG 570 and tanker 885

14th Escort Flotilla

DDG 112, FFG 528 and Tanker 887

15th Escort Flotilla

LPD 999, FFG 572 and Tanker 889

16th Escort Flotilla

FFG 546, FFG 527 and Tanker 889

17th Escort Flotilla
FFG 549, DDG 150 and Tanker 890

18th Escort Flotilla
FFG 571, LPD 989 and Tanker 890

19th Escort Flotilla
FFG 547, FFG 550 and Tanker 889

20th Escort Flotilla
FFG 548, DDG 152 and Tanker 886

21st Escort mission
FFG 573, FFG 574 and Tanker 885
 

escobar

Brigadier
Here it is 21st task force...

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escobar

Brigadier
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China is now laying the diplomatic and legal foundations for a long-term naval presence in Djibouti, with a range of recent
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alleging that Beijing is
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for naval access in the country. The facilities would likely be located at Obock, on Djibouti’s northern coast. While China will not formally call the facilities a “base” anytime soon, it will likely function in a manner that brings it awfully close to being one in all but name.

Durable access to facilities in Djibouti that can be easily improved by Chinese construction firms would give China a formidable—and more permanent—maritime and potentially aerial springboard deep into the Northwestern Indian Ocean Region, as well as North, East, and Central Africa. The black circle in Exhibit 1 shows the territory lying within a 2,500 km radius of Djibouti—a conservative estimate of the rough distance a Shaanxi Y-8 class maritime patrol aircraft would be able to cover without aerial refueling.

The idea of more enduring Chinese military presence in Djibouti has clearly advanced far beyond the realm of speculation, and is now approaching the stages of signing paper, moving assets, and potentially soon pouring concrete. Negotiations appear well underway. Even more definitive than Djibouti President Ismail Guelleh’s direct statements to Western media that his government has been negotiating with China to establish a Chinese facility is the excerpt below from the interview he granted to Saudi-owned newspaper
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on 1 June 2015:

Q: You have a U.S. base, another French base, and a Japanese base. I think that a Chinese base will be opened soon. What if Iran proposed to you the opening of a base for it in Djibouti?… Have the military bases benefited Djibouti?
Guelleh: Yes, a great deal…. We will now sign an agreement with China. We are bound by strong ties with them [the Chinese].
Q: When will the Chinese base start working?
Guelleh: Perhaps we will sign the agreement officially after two weeks.
Q: And what if India requested a base for it[self]?
Guelleh: We have no intention of approving the opening of other bases. That is enough.
...
 

antiterror13

Brigadier
Ok here's all 21 missions

1st Escort Flotilla

DDG 170, DDG 169 and Tanker 887

2nd Escort Flotilla

DDG 167, FFG 570 and Tanker 887

3rd Escort Flotilla

FFG 529, FFG 530 and Tanker 886

4th Escort Flotilla

FFG 525, FFG 526, FFG 568 and Tanker 886

5th Escort Flotilla

DDG 168, FFG 568 and Tanker 887

6th Escort Flotilla

LPD 998, DDG 171 and Tanker 887

7th Escort Flotilla

FFG 529, FFG 530 and Tanker 886

8th Escort Flotilla

FFG 525, FFG 526 and Tanker 886

9th Escort Flotilla

DDG 169, FFG 569 and Tanker 885

10th Escort Flotilla

DDG 171, FFG 571 and Tanker 885

11th Escort Flotilla

DDG 113, FFG 538 and Tanker 887

12th Escort Flotilla

FFG 548, FFG 549 and Tanker 886

13th Escort Flotilla

FFG 568, FFG 570 and tanker 885

14th Escort Flotilla

DDG 112, FFG 528 and Tanker 887

15th Escort Flotilla

LPD 999, FFG 572 and Tanker 889

16th Escort Flotilla

FFG 546, FFG 527 and Tanker 889

17th Escort Flotilla
FFG 549, DDG 150 and Tanker 890

18th Escort Flotilla
FFG 571, LPD 989 and Tanker 890

19th Escort Flotilla
FFG 547, FFG 550 and Tanker 889

20th Escort Flotilla
FFG 548, DDG 152 and Tanker 886

21st Escort mission
FFG 573, FFG 574 and Tanker 885

Excellent compilation Asif. It seems PLAN rotates the ships, I don't see any Frigate/DDG been sent twice
 

AZaz09dude

Junior Member
Registered Member
Press TV: China to take over strategic US military base in Djibouti

By
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on August 19, 2015

Djibouti reportedly ordered US to vacate secondary Obock military base in bid to turn over to Chinese military


djibouti-base.jpg

Camp Lemonnier in the tiny African state of Djibouti is the largest US military base in the entire African continent. (file photo)

Editor’s note: Another story totally unreported in the US media, partially confirmed in the UK and elsewhere. This would be a crushing blow to the US, perhaps more symbolic than real. The US has 4 other covert bases in Africa but is also aware that participation in the broad shooting war going on would make what happened in Iraq look like child’s play. With very confirmed reports, especially from Cameroon, showing France as fully complicit in the terrorism in West Africa, one might wonder what role the US could have been playing in the first place.

The tiny African state of Djibouti has reportedly ordered the US to vacate its secondary Obock military base in the nation in a bid to turn over the installation to the Chinese military and its contingent of 10,000 troops, raising major concerns in Washington, which holds the largest military base in Djibouti, Camp Lemonnier.

“The announcement, made the day after US Secretary of State John Kerry visited Djibouti last May, is deeply worrying for Pax Americana, for it comes on top of a major package of economic investments by China that has Djiboutian President [Ismaïl Omar] Guelleh openly talking about the importance of his new friends from Asia,” US-based magazineCounterPunch wrote in an article on Monday.

According to the report, the US is about to lose one of its military bases in Djibouti, home to America’s largest permanent military installation in Africa that includes 4,000 troops and a fleet of US assassination drones that run bombing missions in regional Muslim countries as part of Washington’s official targeted killing program.

The Horn of Africa nation, strategically located in the critical entrance from the Indian Ocean to the Red Sea, lies at the gateway to the busy Suez Canal waterway and provides a port to neighboring landlocked Ethiopia.

The report further points out that the US Defense Department pays Djibouti nearly $63 million per year for the use of the Camp Lemonnier military base, which also serves as one of the world’s largest drone bases.

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China, the report adds, has offered Djibouti a far more generous offer, namely the completion of a $3-billion railroad project from the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa to Djibouti.

“[Beijing] is also investing $400 million in modernizing Djibouti’s notoriously undersized port,” the CounterPunch article added.

According to the article and recent Western press reports, the Chinese military presence in Djibouti has introduced – among other possibilities – the prospect of US schemes to organize a ‘regime-change’ effort in the African nation under the pretext of democratic change.

UK-based Daily Telegraph highlighted the concerns of Pentagon officials regarding China’s deepening commercial involvement in Djibouti in a report last May, saying the development may prompt Washington “to relocate sensitive intelligence-gathering operations to more secure locations outside Djibouti where they are better protected from interception by the Chinese.”

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US military installation Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti is the key base of Washington’s assassination drones.The British daily further said that there are “fears” that President Guelleh may seek “to impose restrictions on the US military’s access to Camp Lemonnier, such as placing limits on the movement of military personnel and military operations conducted from the base.”

The daily also quoted a “senior US official” as saying that the “trade deal between Djibouti and China has raised serious security concerns with regard to Camp Lemonnier. There are fears that if President Guelleh gets too close to China then he may be tempted to impose restrictions on US access to the base, which would seriously affect the West’s attempts to collect intelligence on Islamic State (Daesh) and al-Qaeda.”

Pointing to a potential US scheme to plan a regime-change operation in Djibouti, the British daily added, “American diplomats are also resisting attempts by Mr Guelleh to stand for re-election next year, which they argue is unconstitutional. Mr Guelleh has been in power since 1999, and by law should stand down. If he does so then Washington hopes a more reasonable leader will be elected, one more aligned to the Pentagon’s interests.”

Moreover, in an April 23 article titled “China Comes to Djibouti,” US journalForeign Affairs wrote that “Washington would need to band together with other allies such as France, Germany and Japan to try and counter China’s growing influence in Djibouti.”

“If it doesn’t, Washington might find that the country hosting its only military base in sub-Saharan Africa owes more favors to China, its rising global rival, than to the United States itself,” the magazine emphasized.


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