Australia, China Conduct Live-Fire Naval Exercise in Yellow Sea
25 September 2010
China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) naval frigate 'Mianyang' maneuvres towards the Garden Island naval base in Sydney Harbour, 20 Sep 2010
The Australian frigate, HMAS
Warramunga">Warramunga
, participated in the first live-firing exercise of its kind with the Chinese navy off the Shandong Peninsular in the Yellow Sea in north-eastern China.
The vessel took part in the drill alongside the Chinese warship, the
Louyang
. Joint helicopter missions and search-and-rescue operations are also part of the joint maneuvers. Australian navy chiefs say the exercises are among the most complex ever conducted with Chinese forces. The naval officials say the presence of HMAS
Warramunga">Warramunga
and her crew highlights greater cooperation between Canberra and Beijing.
The vessel's senior officer, Commander Bruce Legge, said the war games were an effective way to build trust and friendship. He dismissed concerns that Australia's traditional military ally, the United States, was not invited to take part.
In a recent essay, defense analyst Hugh White of the Australian National University wrote that growing tensions between Washington and Beijing could harm Australia's prosperity.
"I'm contrasting the future we might be facing over the next few years and few decades with the remarkably good period we've had for the last 40 years, where U.S. uncontested primacy in the Asia-Pacific region has given Asia and Australia a really wonderful ride," said White. "And my fear is that if, as China grows, the U.S.-China relationship becomes more competitive, more contested, then we're going to find ourselves in a different kind of world in which the peace of Asia is not nearly so guaranteed and the economic opportunities for Australia, particularly our economic opportunities with China, might be more constricted."
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