YUAN WANG 5, SURVEILLANCE VESSEL OF CHINA

  • The Chinese research and survey vessel Yuan Wang 5 has re-entered the Indian Ocean in what coincides with a planned Indian long-range missile test on December 15 or 16. In a similar incident last month, another vessel, Yuan Wang 6, entered the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) coinciding with a planned Indian missile launch, but the launch was then deferred.
  • According to the maritime vessel-tracking portal marinetraffic.com, Yuan Wang 5 had entered the IOR through the Sunda strait, off Indonesia, late in the evening of December 4. The vessel was in the IOR last month.
  • As per the open-source intelligence handle on Twitter@detresfa, India had issued a NOTAM (Notice to Airmen) for a no-fly zone over the Bay of Bengal for a possible missile launch with a window between December 15 and 16, for a maximum distance of 5,400 km. Given the range, it is likely to be the test of the Agni-5 intermediate range ballistic missile.
  • While research activities are allowed on international waters as per international regulations, the data generated had a dual nature, including military, and on many occasions, the motive of the Chinese vessels seemed doubtful, defence officials had said.

Diplomatic clash

  • In August, the docking of Yuan Wang 5 at Hambantota in Sri Lanka had created a major diplomatic situation between India and Sri Lanka.
  • Last week, Navy chief Admiral R. Hari Kumar said that there were a lot of Chinese ships which operated in the region.
  • He added that there were four to six Navy ships, research vessels and fishing vessels apart from 60-odd ships of extra-regional forces, and as a resident power, the Indian Navy kept track and ensured that “they do not undertake any inimical activities”.
  • As reported by The Hindu earlier, there had been a steady rise in the deployment of Chinese research vessels in the IOR, and the general area of deployment observed was around 90-degree east ridge and southwest Indian ridge.
  • The research or survey vessels have powerful equipment for snooping and gathering a range of data.
  • The Chinese presence in the Indian Ocean began in 2008 under the garb of anti-piracy operations in the Gulf of Aden and have since maintained continuous presence in the region, even deploying nuclear attack submarines (SSN) on occasions.
  • China had since set up a military base in Djibouti and developed several dual-use ports in the IOR in Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Pakistan and other countries.

SOURCE: THE HINDU, THE ECONOMIC TIMES, PIB

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