One of Australia’s most senior intelligence figures says aspects of China’s deployment of three warships to the Tasman Sea appear “designed to be provocative”, as the naval task group continues to be closely tracked heading back towards Tasmania.
Director-general of the Office of National Intelligence (ONI) Andrew Shearer this week delivered a blunt assessment of Beijing’s strategic aims for sending the heavily armed flotilla to the region, saying it was to “shape” the behaviour of states like Australia.
He also described its recent live-fire exercises as unprecedented and said they demonstrated “China’s growing capability to project military power into our immediate region” was “now matched by an increasing intent to do so”.
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“We judge Beijing intends to normalise this sort of presence, shape the responses of those in the region, and observe and learn from our reactions,” he told the Senate estimates hearing.
“The largest and least transparent military build-up since the Second World War will mean the PLA will be able to operate at greater distances from mainland China, in greater numbers, including into Australia’s immediate seas and skies,” he said.
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Defying China’s reckless actions in the West Philippine Sea – [Comment by Victor Andres C. Manhit, president of the Stratbase ADR Institute]