SAF beefing up land, air, sea operations to tackle terrorism

18,000 soldiers to be trained each year at new institute as S'pore refines counter-terror response: Ng Eng Hen

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Reciting the SAF pledge at Temasek Polytechnic with NSmen, their employers and civilian colleagues are (from left) Brigadier-General Ong Tze-Ch'in, director of military intelligence; Association of Small and Medium Enterprises (Asme) president Kurt W
Reciting the SAF pledge at Temasek Polytechnic with NSmen, their employers and civilian colleagues are (from left) Brigadier-General Ong Tze-Ch'in, director of military intelligence; Association of Small and Medium Enterprises (Asme) president Kurt Wee; Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen; Lieutenant- General Perry Lim, Chief of Defence Force; and Mr Eric Tan, Asme council member and chairman of the SAF Day Combined Rededication Ceremony's organising committee. ST PHOTO: CHEW SENG KIM

The Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) is making a suite of changes to land, air and sea operations to better tackle the scourge of terrorism, which has risen in worrying intensity and proximity to Singapore.

Outlining the steps, Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen said some 18,000 soldiers, including full-time and operationally ready national servicemen, will be trained yearly at the Island Defence Training Institute, to open at the end of this month.

The training will cover areas such as scenario-based simulation and live firing for homeland security operations; search-and-arrest procedures to be undertaken by SAF personnel; knowledge of legal powers and rights of private defence; and retractable truncheon drills.

Selected NS units may also be deployed for homeland security operations during in-camp training (ICT), such as joint deterrence patrols with the police and coastal surveillance operations.

NS units will also undergo refresher training during ICT so their skills are kept current and they can be readily deployed.

Speaking to local and foreign media earlier this week ahead of SAF Day today, Dr Ng said Singapore is refining its counter-terrorism response by equipping each soldier with counter-terrorism skills, just as how the terrorist threat has gone "from wholesale to retail".

He cited the Al-Qaeda group as an example of wholesale terrorism with a centralised hierarchy and foot soldiers who lacked skills like bomb-making, and the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) as an embodiment of retail terrorism, with its individual fighters possessing skills to make improvised explosives and carry out hijacking or kidnapping.

"Now, just as terrorism has gone from wholesale to retail, we need to have those capabilities for our own self-defence at the retail level," said Dr Ng, noting this year's SAF Day is significant as it also marks the 75th anniversary of the fall of Singapore and 50th year of national service.

He said the rise of ISIS-linked terrorists fighting in the Philippine city of Marawi is a worrying sign of the threat getting closer to home.

Another cause for concern is the increase of such incidents globally. Terror incidents jumped threefold from about 5,000 in 2011 to nearly 17,000 in 2014. In contrast, the figure in 2000 was around 1,800.

"The assumption is that attacks that occur in Singapore may increase in scale, frequency and impact. It is a sobering change of assumptions, but I think we better change to meet a heightened need rather than be caught with inadequate resources," said Dr Ng, who also spoke of the need to be vigilant against terrorism in his SAF Day message delivered yesterday.

On the maritime front, the Republic of Singapore Navy will be deploying more unmanned assets and tapping more effective data analytics to enhance security.

As for the Republic of Singapore Air Force, it has introduced advanced sensors providing 24-hour low-level radar coverage and developed a Combat Management System that fuses information from multiple sources to present an integrated view of the air situation.

The SAF is also increasing links with the Home Team by validating various plans and developing a common command-and-control information system "so that agencies can talk", said Dr Ng, who touched on other topics, like Singapore's readiness to help in the Marawi conflict.

He added that Singapore and Singaporeans have to deal with terrorism decisively and "prepare for it" as it is an endemic problem that might not go away within a decade.

"It might not go away even within our lifetime. When they attack us, we must respond to it, make sure that we remain cohesive, make sure that we deal with the aftermath."

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Combined rededication ceremony on SAF day. str.sg/4aiL

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on July 01, 2017, with the headline SAF beefing up land, air, sea operations to tackle terrorism. Subscribe