The U.S.
Navy and the Chinese Navy conducted their first joint anti-piracy drill. A
Chinese frigate (the 4,000 ton Type 54A Yiyang) and an American destroyer (the
8,200 ton Burke class Churchill) carried out several training operations over
five hours. This included joint use of communications as well as boarding and
onboard search procedures. This was done in the Gulf of Aden, off Somalia.
While
there was some PR angle to this, the crews of the two ships did get a useful
look at how the other side operates. More to the point, it was a useful drill
in the event that Chinese and American warships found themselves dealing with
the same bunch of Somali pirates. Both sides will distribute what was learned
throughout their respective fleets.
All this
is part of a trend. China is becoming more inclined to work with ships from
other nations patrolling the pirate infested waters off Somalia. Earlier this
year, for example, China, India, and Japan agreed to have their warships off
the Somali coast coordinate operations to more efficiently protect civilian
ships in the area. Chinese and Indian warships have been operating
independently off Somalia, while Japanese ships have been operating with Task
Force 151. Most warships on anti-piracy duty belong to TF 151. Most of the
remainder work with EUNFS (European Union Naval Force Somalia). But some
nations continue to operate independently, more or less. In these cases there
is always some communication, coordination, and sharing of information with TF
151 and EUNFS.
The
anti-piracy patrol off Somalia consists of several dozen warships and recon
aircraft that patrol the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean areas searching for pirates
and, in general, protecting merchant shipping from pirate attack. But all these
ships and aircraft have never been under a single command and coordination is
often sporadic.
The
Chinese, Indians, and Japanese have not formed a new task force but have simply
increased coordination among their warships to provide more efficient escorts
for convoys of merchant ships operating in the area.
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