China joins Australia's largest naval drill

Royal Australian Navy officers with their Chinese counterparts during Exercise Kakadu off Darwin. This is the first time that China is taking part.
Royal Australian Navy officers with their Chinese counterparts during Exercise Kakadu off Darwin. This is the first time that China is taking part. PHOTO: REUTERS

SYDNEY • China is participating for the first time in Australia's largest maritime exercise as more than 3,000 personnel from 27 countries engage in joint training off the strategic northern port of Darwin.

Exercise Kakadu is hosting 23 ships and submarines from across the Indo-Pacific region, enabling them to establish familiarity, which helps to prevent conflict on the high seas and to coordinate disaster relief efforts.

Commander Anita Sellick of the Australian frigate HMAS Newcastle said that two Royal Australian Navy sailors were accepted onto China's naval frigate Huangshan during the drill.

"Two of our Australian navy sailors are across actually, right now, in the Chinese ship. So they've both been able to integrate within each other's navy and learn a little bit of what life is like for them today in Exercise Kakadu," Commander Sellick told Reuters last Saturday.

Commander of the Australian Fleet, Rear-Admiral Jonathan Mead, told reporters in Darwin in a televised interview on Friday that there were mutual benefits in building understanding and trust during the exercise.

The joint military practice, which will continue until Saturday, is supported by the Royal Australian Air Force and involves 21 aircraft.

Darwin, on the doorstep of Asia, is Australia's most strategically important city and has been home to a contingent of US Marines since 2011, making it the logical place for the exercise.

Integrating the People's Liberation Army Navy into the biennial training with American, Australian, New Zealand and Canadian forces for the first time has given China an opportunity to improve its working relationship with those countries, which has been tense at times.

In April, three Australian warships had a challenging encounter with China as they passed through the South China Sea. Then in May, the United States disinvited China from joint naval exercises off Hawaii in response to what it called China's militarisation of disputed areas of the South China Sea, an allegation Beijing rejects.

Besides Australia and China, the other participating countries in Exercise Kakadu are Japan, South Korea, Thailand, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Brunei, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, Cook Islands, Fiji, France, India, Malaysia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Singapore, Sri Lanka, East Timor, Tonga, United Arab Emirates, the US and Vietnam.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on September 10, 2018, with the headline China joins Australia's largest naval drill. Subscribe