Shawn C advised
offline on July 7/8, 2020 of a possible sale of US Osprey tiltrotors to
Indonesia.
More from Shawn C, on other subjects, tomorrow.
Further details
from Stars and Stripes, July 7, 2020 https://www.stripes.com/news/pacific/us-approves-osprey-sale-to-indonesia-as-japan-preps-to-deploy-the-aircraft-1.636591 :
The US State Department has
approved the sale of eight MV-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft to
Indonesia, the US Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA) announced July 6, 2020.
The announcement comes as
Japan (the first non-US buyer for Ospreys) prepares to deploy its first of 17
Ospreys to Camp Kisarazu, a Japan Army airfield in Chiba Prefecture.
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The total cost to Indonesia
for the Ospreys, along with related equipment, is estimated at US$2
billion, DSCA said in a statement.
The
sale includes 24 Rolls Royce engines, infrared radars, missile warning systems,
multi-band radios, airborne GPS, machine guns and various other equipment along
with software, training for personnel and U.S. government and contractor
engineering, logistics and technical support, the statement said.
Indonesia, the world’s
most populous Muslim nation with territory spread across more than 17,000
islands, employs a large fleet of conventional military aircraft for disaster
relief and in a decades’ long fight against Islamic extremists [PETE COMMENT: not to mention Indonesia straffing defenseless Christians in East Timor (1975-1999) and West Papuan villagers with OV-10F Broncos from the US!]. Like several
other Southeast Asia nations, Indonesia claims South China Sea territory that
is also claimed by China."
“This proposed sale will
support the foreign policy goals and national security objectives of the United
States by improving the security of an important regional partner that is a
force for political stability, and economic progress in the Asia-Pacific
region,” the agency’s statement said. “It is vital to U.S. national interest to
assist Indonesia in developing and maintaining a strong and effective self-defense
capability.”
The proposed sale will enhance
Indonesia’s humanitarian and disaster relief capabilities and support
amphibious operations, the statement added.” [see good Youtube video on the possible sale, 25 seconds in at https://youtu.be/31jfJqLZKk4 ]
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Shawn C says that
he is not sure how the Osprey deal will actually go through
when in May 2020 Indonesia reported it had cut its defence budget by $500
million due to COVID-19.
Interesting to note Indonesia pays cash to the US while Indonesia does a part-commodities trade with the Russians.
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The Indonesians have the
capacity to use Ospreys on Indonesia’s Makassar-class
Landing Platform Docks (LPDs). These
LPDs will probably need heat modifications on their helicopter decks due to the
hot air engine blast of the Ospreys. Makassars are a bit austere - in
fact they will need significant reinforcement to land a heavy V-22 on their
helicopter deck.
The Ospreys will be useful for Humanitarian
Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) in cyclone/typhoon and Tsunami prone
Indonesia. But for the cost of one Osprey Indonesia could buy two Indonesian built short takeoff and landing turboprop transports (eg. the Indonesian
Aerospace N-219 and larger).
Shawn C is interested in Indonesia’s Makassar-class LPD - they have been
good business for the Indonesian national shipbuilder PT PAL
having sold
Makassars to the Indonesian, Philippine and Malaysian navies. Meanwhile South
Korea’s Daesun
has sold Makassars to the Myanmar and Peruvian navies (Peru on selling one
to the Brazilian Navy). Also see The
Diplomat paysite article.
Here's a good video at navyrecognition
Shawn C found of the Peruvian Navy launching their Makassar class - you can
peer right into the ship, and it made Shawn C realise how austere it is – troop berthing
must be quite packed, like a WW2 Landing Ship Tank.
A Makassar cost close to US$50 million (cost for Indonesian Navy? More
for export?) - so for US$2 billion the Indonesians could fund 20 Makassar ships
and up to 30 EC725
helicopters, which would allow them to spread out their naval and marine
forces more nodally across the Indonesian Archipelago.
Or the Indonesians could reinject the funds (and better oversight) to Indonesia’s
troubled local transport aircraft programs - which just lost 'national
strategic priority' due to delays: see https://www.cnnindonesia.com/teknologi/20200625155909-199-517506/putra-bj-habibie-bicara-beda-masa-depan-drone-dan-pesawat-ri
(Indonesian language article. Right-click mouse to translate into English).
More from Shawn C, on other subjects, tomorrow.
Well, there are now reports from the Indonesian Defense Ministry denying they placed an FMS request - one Indonesian news site directly quoted the Defense Ministry’s Secretary General, but there hasn’t been any coverage in their English language media - Jakarta Globe, Jakarta Times
ReplyDeleteThanks Shawn C
ReplyDeleteI think you (and I) suspected Indonesia couldn't afford the luxury of Ospreys by paying hard cash - at the moment at least.
I'll write an article tomorrow on what an actual purchase of Ospreys by Indonesia would have meant to Australia.
Cheers
Pete
Hi Shawn C
ReplyDeleteSee my new article "Ospreys Face Saving Distraction for Indonesian Military - Australian Ospreys?" July 14, 2020 at http://gentleseas.blogspot.com/2020/07/ospreys-face-saving-distraction-for.html
Pete