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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, February 1, 2016
India to build satellite tracking station in Vietnam that offers eye on China
People watch as India's
Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV-D6) blasts off carrying a
2117 kg GSAT-6 communication satellite from the Satish Dhawan space
centre at Sriharikota, India, August 27, 2015.REUTERS/STRINGER/FILES
Mon Jan 25, 2016
India
will set up a satellite tracking and imaging centre in southern Vietnam
that will give Hanoi access to pictures from Indian earth observation
satellites that cover the region, including China and the South China
Sea, Indian officials said.
The move, which could irritate Beijing, deepens ties between India and
Vietnam, who both have long-running territorial disputes with China.
While billed as a civilian facility - earth observation satellites have
agricultural, scientific and environmental applications - security
experts said improved imaging technology meant the pictures could also
be used for military purposes.
Hanoi especially has been looking for advanced intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance technologies as tensions rise with China
over the disputed South China Sea, they said.
"In military terms, this move could be quite significant," said Collin
Koh, a marine security expert at Singapore's S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies. "It looks like a win-win for both sides, filling
significant holes for the Vietnamese and expanding the range for the
Indians."
The state-run Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) will fund and
set up the satellite tracking and data reception centre in Ho Chi Minh
City to monitor Indian satellite launches, the Indian officials said.
Indian media put the cost at around $23 million.
India, whose 54-year-old space programme is accelerating, with one
satellite launch scheduled every month, has ground stations in the
Andaman and Nicobar islands, Brunei, Biak in eastern Indonesia and
Mauritius that track its satellites in the initial stages of flight.
The Vietnam facility will bolster those capabilities, said Deviprasad Karnik, an ISRO spokesman.
QUID PRO QUO
But unlike the other overseas stations, the facility will also be
equipped to receive images from India's earth observation satellites
that Vietnam can use in return for granting India the tracking site,
said an Indian government official connected with the space programme.
"This is a sort of quid pro quo which will enable Vietnam to receive IRS
(Indian remote sensing) pictures directly, that is, without asking
India," said the official, who declined to be identified because he was
not authorised to speak to the media.
"Obviously it will include parts of China of interest to Vietnam."
Chinese coastal naval bases, the operations of its coastguard and navy
and its new man-made islands in the disputed Spratly archipelago of the
South China Sea would be targets of Vietnamese interest, security
experts said.
Another Indian official said New Delhi would also have access to the imagery.
India has 11 earth observation satellites in orbit, offering pictures with differing resolutions and areas, the ISRO said.
Indian officials had no timeframe for when the centre would be operational.
"This is at the beginning stages, we are still in dialogue with Vietnamese authorities," said Karnik.
Vietnam's Foreign Ministry confirmed the project, but provided few other details.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a regular
briefing that Beijing hoped the facility "will be able to make a
positive contribution to pushing forward relevant cooperation in the
region". China's Defence Ministry said the proposed tracking station
wasn't a military issue.
Vietnam launched its first earth observation satellite in 2013, but Koh
said it was not thought to produce particularly high resolution images.
BLURRED LINES
Security experts said Vietnam would likely seek real-time access to
images from the Indian satellites as well as training in imagery
analysis, a specialised intelligence field.
"The advance of technology means the lines are blurring between civilian
and military satellites," said Trevor Hollingsbee, a retired naval
intelligence analyst with Britain's Defence Ministry. "In some cases,
the imagery from a modern civilian satellite is good enough for military
use."
Sophisticated military reconnaissance satellites can be used to capture
military signals and communications, as well as detailed photographs of
objects on land, capturing detail to less than a metre, Koh and other
experts said.
The tracking station will be the first such foreign facility in Vietnam
and follows other agreements between Hanoi and New Delhi that have
cemented security ties.
India has extended a $100 million credit line for Hanoi to buy patrol
boats and is training Vietnamese submariners in India while Hanoi has
granted oil exploration blocks to India in waters off Vietnam that are
disputed with China.
Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India has shown a greater
willingness to step up security ties with countries such as Vietnam,
overriding concerns this would upset China, military officials said.
"You want to engage Vietnam in every sphere. The reason is obvious -
China," said retired Indian Air Force group captain Ajay Lele at the New
Delhi-based Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses.
Both India and Vietnam are also modernising their militaries in the face
of Beijing's growing assertiveness, having separately fought wars with
China in past decades.
Australian-based scholar Carl Thayer, who has studied Vietnam's military
since the late 1960s, said the satellite tracking facility showed both
nations wanted to enhance security ties.
"Their interests are converging over China and the South China Sea," he said.
(Additional reporting by Megha Rajagopalan in Beijing and Ho Binh Minh in Hanoi; Editing by Dean Yates)