Jakarta (MI) : Indonesia is beefing up its air presence along the South China Sea, a military officer has announced.
According to IHS Jane’s,
Lieutenant Colonel Andri Gandy, the commander of Ranai airbase on the
Riau Islands, which borders the South China Sea, said Indonesia was
upgrading the airbase so that it could accommodate Sukhoi Su-27 and
Su-30 fighter aircraft. Separately, Indonesian Army (TNI-AD) Chief of
Staff General Budiman said that four Boeing AH-64E Apache attack
helicopters would be deployed to Ranai airbase.
Lt. Col Gandy said that the TNI had already installed runway lights,
taxiway lights and integrated radar at the airbase. He added that there
were plans to extend the length of the runway in order to accommodate
the Su-27 and Su-30s.
The announcement comes at a time when
Indonesia has been raising concerns about China’s territorial designs on
the Natuna Sea off the coast of the Riau Islands. As The Diplomat
previously reported,
Commodore Fahru Zaini, a senior Indonesian defence official, told
reporters: “China has claimed Natuna waters as their territorial waters.
This arbitrary claim is related to the dispute over Spratly and Paracel
Islands between China and the Philippines. This dispute will have a
large impact on the security of Natuna waters.”
Although there have long been suspicions that China’s nine-dashed line overlapped with Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ)
off the Riau Islands, Indonesia has refused to officially acknowledge
the dispute exists. Zaini’s comments seemed to depart from this
position.
However, as Evan A. Laksmana has pointed
out, the Indonesian government quickly disavowed Zaini’s statement. For
example, just days after Zaini spoke, Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa
stated: “Firstly, there is no territorial dispute between Indonesia and
China, especially about the Natunas. In fact, we are cooperating with
China in possibly bringing about foreign direct investment plans in the
Natunas. Second, we are not a claimant state in the South China Sea.”
Laksmana also points out that Indonesia has long planned to beef up
its military forces in the Natuna region as one of its “flashpoint
defence” areas. The Jane’s report said that Zaini described the
Su-27 and Su-30s deployment as part of Indonesia’s Minimum Essential
Force (MEF) concept, which Jane’s explained: “aims to establish
the nature and minimum scale of military capabilities that Indonesia
should seek to deploy in response to a strategic threat.”
According to Laksmana, the “The MEF was designed less for a China
threat and more for an organizational and technological revamp (the TNI
lost numerous men due to accidents and platform decay in the past
decade).” However, Laksmana has argued that the military attention
Indonesia has given the Natuna region is related to the uncertainty over
China’s claim to it. As he wrote in The Diplomat in 2011,
the uncertainty over China’s claims is the reason why “Indonesia held
two of its largest-ever joint military exercises in the area. China’s
claim is also likely behind Indonesia’s decision to forge strategic and
security partnerships with Australia, India, and the United States in
recent years.”
The importance of the Natuna region is both strategic and economic.
With regards to the former, it is located at the southern tip of the
crucial Malacca Strait, where much of Northeast Asia’s oil and natural
gas imports travel through. Economically, the Natuna seas are believed
to contain huge amounts of natural gas. According to the International Energy Administration,
the East Natuna Block holds about 1.3 tcm of gas reserves, nearly half
of all Indonesia’s proven natural gas reserves. The IEA also said this
block is Indonesia’s largest undeveloped gas prospect.
Sumber : Chinadailymail
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