From remote outpost, India looks to check China’s Indian Ocean thrust

Published July 17, 2015
A floating dock of the Indian navy is pictured at the naval base at Port Blair in Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India. —Reuters/File
A floating dock of the Indian navy is pictured at the naval base at Port Blair in Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India. —Reuters/File

PORT BLAIR: One by one, the four Indian warships cruised into a sleepy harbour in the country’s remote Andaman and Nicobar islands, fresh from visiting Southeast Asian capitals and conducting exercises in the disputed South China Sea.

The arrival of the warships at Port Blair earlier this month symbolises how an island chain better known for its beaches and diving is quietly becoming a key plank in New Delhi’s strategy to counter China’s growing naval presence in the Indian Ocean.

In interviews in New Delhi and Port Blair, the archipelago’s administrative hub, Indian defence officials outlined plans to transform a modest military base into a strategic listening post with strengthened air force, navy and army capabilities.

While some of the officials noted that earlier expansion plans had largely faltered, they said there was fresh energy under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who wants to reassert New Delhi’s traditional dominance of the Indian Ocean.

All agreed the chain’s location was its biggest asset in watching China’s navy.

Scattered between the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea, the Andaman and Nicobar islands are closer to Myanmar and Indonesia than the Indian mainland. More importantly, its southern isles lie near the top of the Malacca Straits, a gateway to the Indian Ocean and through which China gets three-quarters of its oil.

“The world’s busiest shipping lanes are just to the south,” Lieutenant Governor A. K. Singh, a former military commander who runs the Andamans, told Reuters from his hill-top office in Port Blair, a one-time British penal colony.

“For too long we have had a fortress mentality about the islands that they had to be defended. The time has come for us to start looking at these very strategically placed islands as a springboard for India.”

Submarine surveillance

India has long had an uneasy relationship with China — a dispute over their Himalayan border led to war in 1962. More recently New Delhi has worried about Chinese submarines venturing into the Indian Ocean.

China’s Foreign Ministry rejected the notion that Chinese naval forays were behind any rise in Indian deployments.

The Chinese Defence Ministry said Beijing cooperated with militaries around the region, including India’s.

“This is an added positive factor for regional peace and stability,” the Defence Ministry said in a statement.

Nevertheless, India is building longer airstrips at the top and bottom of the Andaman and Nicobar chain, partly for long-range surveillance planes, defence officials said.

One is at Campbell Bay on Great Nicobar Island in the south, 240 kilometres (150 miles) from the mouth of the Malacca Straits.

When that air base opened in 2012 with a runway of 3,500 feet (1,060 metres), Chinese military commentators saw it as an offensive move. The military plans to extend the runway to 6,000 feet by next year and then to 10,000 feet.

The air force has been flying new Boeing P8i surveillance aircraft with anti-submarine capabilities from India to Port Blair but once the runway was at 6,000 feet they would also rotate through Campbell Bay from time to time, said a navy pilot in Port Blair who has knowledge of the plans.

“Of all the plans, and some are grand, upgrading Campbell is the critical one. You can watch a lot of stuff from there,” he said.

But no submarine base

India also expects the number of naval vessels based in the island chain to double to 32 before a targeted timeframe of 2022, defence officials said.

Those ships would initially comprise patrol boats, fast attack craft and amphibious landing ships, similar to vessels already here. Frontline warships such as those that spent two months in and around the South China Sea would be stationed in the Andamans in the final phase of the 2022 plan.

The big naval gap is under water.

As early as 2002 the local military command proposed building a submarine base in the sheltered harbour of Kamorta in the southern islands, but defence officials said those plans were on ice.

India has only 13 ageing diesel-electric submarines compared to China’s fleet of around 70 submarines, including nuclear-powered vessels.

On land, India is adding a second infantry brigade of around 3,000 troops to the Andamans over the next three years.

One military official in Port Blair, speaking on condition of anonymity, said force levels needed to rise more quickly.

“But we are starting to make investments and we are stronger here than at any time,” he said.

One notable roadblock had been erecting a radar station on Narcondum Island, which was delayed for years by local environmentalists who said it would endanger a rare hornbill bird. Modi’s administration approved the installation.

Indeed, India was finally realising the Andamans were a “strategic goldmine”, said Jeff Smith, author of Cold Peace: China-India Rivalry in the 21st Century.

“I get the impression that growing concern over the pace of Chinese activity in the Indian Ocean increases the likelihood India will begin to take the Andamans more seriously,” he said.—Reuters

Published in Dawn, July 17th, 2015

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