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31 Dec 2009
A Chinese rear admiral has urged the nation to set up navy supply bases overseas in an interview posted on the Ministry of Defense website after China paid ransom to free a ship held for nine weeks by Somali pirates.
China has operated patrols for a year now in the narrow Gulf of Aden,
escorting Chinese and foreign ships through waters menaced by pirates
operating off the Somali coast.
But coal and ore shipping lanes off the east coast of Africa have
proved harder to defend. The De Xin Hai, captured 700 nautical miles
east of Somalia in October, was ransomed for $4 million on Sunday.
Reflecting on the hardships endured by the Chinese patrol ships in the
anti-piracy effort, Rear Admiral Yin Zhou floated the idea of bases
abroad to support the vessels. (http://news.mod.gov.cn)
"This is entirely a matter for the country's foreign policy circles,
but I feel that would be appropriate if we could have a relatively
stable, fixed base for supplies and maintenance," said Yin, who is
director of an advisory committee for the Chinese navy's drive to
upgrade information technology.
"I think countries near any relatively long-term supply bases
established by China, and other countries participating in the escort
mission, could understand," he said, adding that would be more
affordable than re-supplying via ship on the high seas.
Asian neighbors have been monitoring China's international deployments
for signs of the country's rising global status translating into a more
assertive foreign policy and presence.
China has never renounced the use of force to bring self-ruled and
democratic Taiwan, which it considers sovereign territory, under its
rule, and increased Chinese military activity around a series of
disputed atolls and rocks in the South China Sea has worried Vietnam,
Malaysia and the Philippines, which have their own territorial claims.
The Chinese navy did not call at any port during the four months of its
first mission to the waters off Somalia, creating problems with
straining supplies, medical care and homesickness for sailors unable to
communicate with their families, the interview and other media reports
have noted.
The anti-piracy mission off Somalia has been the first such
long-distance projection of Chinese naval power since the Ming dynasty,
600 years ago.
Chinese ships communicated with ships operating under a multi-national
anti-piracy task force in the Gulf of Aden, but did not formally
cooperate with them. The deputy commander of the Combined Maritime
Forces, Commodore Tim Lowe, suggested China could co-lead the grouping
next year.
Yin did not suggest where the base would be. But the China Daily on
Tuesday ran an interview with the Somali ambassador to China, asking
for international assistance in building a coast guard.
Source: Reuters