Posted on 12/18/2008 11:27:17 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
China is considering sending ships to fight pirates off the Horn of Africa in what would be the countrys first significant long-range naval combat mission since the 15th century.
Senior Colonel Huang Xueping, spokesman for Chinas ministry of national defence, told the FT an anti-piracy mission was still in the consideration stage. But he said: There will be an announcement very soon.
Since late October, more than 30 ships have been attacked by pirates based in Somalia and up to 19 vessels captured. These include a Chinese fishing vessel with 30 crew seized off the coast of Yemen on Tuesday.
It was freed on Wednesday by a multilateral force, according to Xinhua, the official news agency.
The UN Security Council on Tuesday authorised states to conduct land and air attacks on pirate bases in Somalia. This follows the sending by Nato of ships to accompany World Food Programme vessels. The European Union, India, Russia and the US have also sent ships and helicopters on anti-piracy missions to the area.
Beijing in recent years has tried to placate foreign fears over its military expansion by claiming it is pursing a peaceful rise as a power. Other than for a 2002 global tour and a handful of port calls to the US and Europe over the past decade, Chinas navy has not ventured far out to sea since the 15th century voyages around the world undertaken by Zheng He, the countrys most famous explorer. But the country is increasing military spending at 15-20 per cent a year and the US and Japan believe it is developing a blue-water navy.
A senior defence official told the FT in November that China wanted eventually to be able to add aircraft carriers to its navy, although he emphasised Beijing would not use [an aircraft carrier] to pursue global deployment or global reach.
Any Chinese anti-piracy operation is expected to be small and observers doubt Beijing would be comfortable taking part in a bigger international operation if it carried a significant risk of combat, even under a UN mandate.
A Western military attaché in Beijing said the hope was that China would send one destroyer and one supply ship to the area and loosely co-ordinate with other forces there.
But that they would put themselves under somebody elses command, for example become part of the [EUs] Atlanta operation, seems unimaginable, said the attaché.
Your nation wanted superpower status, then fine, exercise it.
Send your blue water navy out like the west has for hundreds of years and help keep the shipping lanes free across the entire world without much gratitude like we have.
Duties like this comes with the title.
In a saner day, a saner president-elect would challenge the Chicoms to a little friendly competition to see who could have the most pirate corpses hanging from yardarms within a given month. We could both chip in on a traveling trophy.
15th century Chinese ocean ship. Approximately 400 feet, 1,500 tons.
http://scalemodel.net/Gallery/Chineseship.aspx
I have seen the video how they delt with their home grown pirates.
Ten minute trial, then they all got a bullet in the back of their heads.
Guess what? It stopped off their coast.
Who would have thunk?
Not a problem for the nascent obama regime. As the US withdraws from that part of the world, closing down our operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, China has a massive army, and naval fleet still in development, that will move into to police the area.
The Chinese will not be as polite or circumspect as the Americans. But the Middle East WILL deliver large tributes of petroleum to China.
The Muslims become the “dhimmi”. The Chinese may be depended upon to remain “kufir”, inverting the entire idea of the worldwide Caliphate.
The Chinese and Russians want to lead the anti-Piracy naval fleet. Russia already has one vessel there, and is planning to send more, perhaps the vessels that just visited Cuba, and a few more nuclear cruisers. The Chinese are planning to send destroyers too.
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