China targets pirates in groundbreaking mission
By WILLIAM FOREMAN, Associated Press Writer
GUANGZHOU, China – Chinese warships headed toward
Somali waters Friday to combat piracy, the first time the
communist country has sent ships on a mission that could
involve fighting so far beyond its territorial waters.
The deployment to the Gulf of Aden, which has been
plagued by increasingly bold pirate attacks in recent
months, marks a major step in the navy's evolution from
mostly guarding China's coasts to patrolling waters far
from home.
The move was welcomed by the U.S. military, which has
been escorting cargo ships in the region along with India,
Russia and the European Union. But analysts predicted
the Chinese intervention could be troubling to some Asian
nations who might see it as a sign of the Chinese military
becoming more aggressive.
The naval force that set sail from southern Hainan on
Friday afternoon included a supply ship and two
destroyers — armed with guided missiles, special forces
and two helicopters. China announced it was joining the
anti-piracy mission Tuesday after the U.N. Security
Council authorized nations to conduct land and air attacks
on pirate bases.
Pentagon spokesman Maj. Stewart Upton said the U.S.
welcomed China's move.
Pirates working out of Somalia have made an estimated
$30 million this year, seizing more than 40 vessels off the
country's 1,880-mile (3,000-kilometer) coastline. Most of
the attacks have occurred in the Gulf of Aden, one of the
world's busiest shipping lanes.
Deploying ships to the area helped stoke national pride
among Chinese who feel their increasingly wealthy nation
should be playing a bigger role in world affairs.
The front-page of the Southern Metropolis Daily — one of
southern China's most popular newspapers — had a
photo Friday of a special forces member posing with his
finger on the trigger of an assault rifle armed with a
grenade launcher. A headline read, "They won't rule out a
direct conflict with pirates."
For several decades, China has kept a massive army
focused on protecting its land borders, while the country's
navy was relatively weak. But in recent years, as China
became more deeply involved in the global economy, it
concluded that a stronger navy was needed to protect its
increasingly vital sea shipments of oil, raw materials and
other goods.
China has been rapidly beefing up its navy with new
destroyers, submarines and missiles. Naval officers have
even been talking about building an aircraft carrier that
could help the navy become a "blue-water" force — a fleet
capable of operating far from home.
Denny Roy, a senior fellow at the East-West Center in
Hawaii, said the naval buildup and the mission to Somalia
are the latest signs that China is no longer willing to rely
on the U.S. or other foreign navies to protect its
increasingly global interests.
"China has not been dissuaded from entering the field,"
Roy said. "That leaves open the possibility of a China-
U.S. naval rivalry in the future."
Roy predicted China's move would alarm Japan and some
in South Korea because both countries have long-
standing territorial disputes with China. But he said most
Southeast Asian countries may see China's involvement
in the anti-piracy campaign as a positive thing. It would
mean that China was using its greater military might for
constructive purposes, rather than challenging the current
international order.
India, another longtime rival of China, would likely
welcome the Chinese naval presence off Somalia for the
short term, said C. Uday Bhaskar, a former naval
commander and retired director of India's Institute of
Defense Studies and Analyses. He doubted it would upset
the strategic balance.
"If it is working for the common good, then I think India will
welcome it," he said.
China's military has not said how long the mission would
last, but the state-run China Daily newspaper recently
reported the ships would be gone for about three months.
The paper said about 20 percent of the 1,265 Chinese
ships passing through the Somali area have come under
attack this year.
The mission will likely offer Chinese sailors invaluable on-
the-job training, according to Stratfor, an Austin, Texas-
based intelligence company. The mission will be complex,
with crews having to do refueling, resupply and repairs far
from home amid the constant threat of pirate attacks.
The waters will also be crowded with naval ships from
around the world, testing the Chinese ships' abilities to
communicate effectively with other vessels in a common
mission that has little central organization.
The Chinese will very likely monitor the way foreign
forces, "especially U.S. warships, communicate with each
other and with their shipborne helicopters," the Stratfor
report said.
A NATO task force to the Gulf of Aden was recently
replaced by a European Union flotilla with four to six ships
patrolling the area.
About a dozen other warships, including U.S., German,
and Danish ships, are in the region as part of a separate
international flotilla based in Bahrain and engaged in anti-
terrorism operations. Several individual nations, including
Saudi Arabia, Russia, Malaysia and India, also have
vessels in the Gulf of Aden.
The China Daily on Friday quoted Rear Adm. Du Jingchen,
the mission's chief commander, as saying a total of 1,000
crew members will be on the three Chinese ships.
"We could encounter unforeseen situations," Du was
quoted as saying. "But we are prepared for them."
Associated Press writer Gavin Rabinowitz contributed
from New Delhi.
轉貼自︰
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081227/ap_on_re_as/piracy
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