Secret air defence asset … a Sukhoi SU-30MK2 jet fighter.
INDONESIA is sending its front-line Sukhoi jet fighters to
take part in Australia's largest air combat exercise later this month,
signalling a new era of enhanced defence co-operation. The Indonesian air force has never given the Australian
Defence Force access to the Russian-made aircraft, which were built to
compete with the United States' fourth generation jet fighters.
But four of the Sukhoi SU-30s will be flown to the Northern
Territory to take part in Exercise Pitch Black 2012, which will include
mock combat battles with Australian FA-18s in Australian and Indonesian
airspace.
US jet fighters will take part in the exercise, which will
run from July 27 to August 17 and will be commanded from Darwin and
Tindal air bases.
John Farrell, a military analyst, said the decision to send
the Sukhoi fighters to Australia would bring defence co-operation
between the ADF and Indonesian military to an unprecedented level. ''Indonesia has never before been prepared to send its
primary air defence asset to a foreign nation,'' Mr Farrell, who
publishes the Australian & NZ Defender Magazine, said.
''The fact they are sending them to Australia indicates that
Canberra and Jakarta have looked up and seen much greater threats around
them,'' he said, referring to China and India.
''The Sukhoi [SU-30s] are Indonesia's most secret air defence
asset … this shows a lot of trust towards Australia a decade after
relations between the two defence forces were in deep freeze over East
Timor.'' The decision is also a vote of confidence in the defence
relationship after Indonesia expressed concern over US marines operating
from a joint facility in Darwin.
The Indonesian Air Force spokesman, Colonel Agung Sasongko Jati, confirmed to the Herald the plan to send jets to Australia for Pitch Black.
He said the air force had needed to train its pilots in
flying the new aircraft before they could deploy them in the joint
exercise. Indonesia's air force has been on a buying spree recently
with the next-generation Russian-built Sukhoi jets. It already operates
10 Sukhoi-27s and four Sukhoi-30MK2 jets, and recently announced a new
order for six Sukhoi-30MK2 fighters.
A joint communique issued after the July 3 meeting between
Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and the Prime Minister,
Julia Gillard, said that ''co-operation between Australian and
Indonesian defence forces goes from strength to strength'' and
encouraged senior defence officials in both countries to ''review
existing security co-operation''.
Australia and Indonesia are negotiating to establish a Defence Co-operation Arrangement.