Yas, writing at Singapore’s longest-running
independent online media platform, The Online Citizen (TOC), has penned a most excellent
August 25, 2021 article:
"Building war ships and submarines: Indonesia
bolsters defence capabilities"
"Indonesia's military spending is the
seventh-largest in Asia, the data in April 2021 showed.
JAKARTA, INDONESIA — In a bid to
buttress its defence capabilities, Indonesia is manufacturing its own war ships
and submarines, part of which includes a collaboration with one of South
Korea’s shipbuilding titans.
State-owned defence
company PT PAL has worked with Daewoo
Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering [DSME] to produce submarines since 2013.
The Indonesia-South Korea partnership
has manufactured three submarines: The KRI Nagapasa- 403 [first of class] in 2017, the KRI
Ardadedali-404 in 2018, and the KRI Alugoro-405.
[see Submarine Matters' articles on Indonesia's Nagapasa-class subs dated August 4, 2017,
April 16, 2019, April 17, 2019, April 23, 2019 and October 29, 2019.]
The first two [subs], produced in
South Korea, have been used in operations.
As many as 206 Indonesian technicians
were involved in the manufacturing process of the KRI-Alugoro.
More recently, Indonesia and South
Korea are working jointly on the development of the KF-X [aka KF-21 which Indonesia calls the "IF-X" or F-33 stealth fighter].
South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said
on 28 June that ministers from the two nations have “agreed to closely
co-operate to make sure that mutually beneficial, substantive co-operation
projects like the KF-21/IF-X project will proceed smoothly”.
Indonesia has also agreed on the
purchase of six units of trainer jets from South Korea’s Korea Aerospace
Industries (KAI) in a S$240 million deal.
Indonesia’s Navy
Chief of Staff Admiral Yudo Margono said that
stealth missile ship KRI Golok-688, launched in Banyuwangi in East Java, is
capable of being deployed in all types of operations, from war to non-war ones.
The hit-and-run
ship—produced by PT Lundin Industry Invest—is the first one made of carbon fibre composite,
making it difficult to be detected by potential adversaries. With higher
specific strength, it is also more lightweight and is highly resistant to
corrosion. The 28-knot ship is equipped with a 30-mm cannon and a 12.7-mm gun
with a cruising speed of 16 knots. It can carry around 25 crew members. Admiral
Yudo said that the ship will complete its manufacturing process in October
2021, adding that the boat will be dispatched in the country’s most strategic
waters such as the Natuna and the Ambalat waters.
The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) data in April 2021 revealed that Indonesia’s military spending was the seventh-largest in Asia — making up 0.9 per cent of its national GDP. The Indonesian government has allocated Rp 133 trillion for defence in the 2022 State Budget draft, down from the 2021 State Budget with Rp 137.3 trillion. The 2020 budget will be used for developments in defence, order and security to ensure that national development programmes will run as smoothly as planned."
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