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Indian Navy seeing situation in Indian Ocean - Duration: 4:10.

As countries like Bangladesh, Myanmar, Vietnam and Thailand keenly watch the outcome of the

standoff at the Doklam in Bhutan between the Indian and Chinese armies; New Delhi has tasked

the Indian Navy to silently spread its influence and further strengthen its grip over the Indian

Ocean Region.

Besides, the immediate security concern, India's stand on Doklam is also influenced by the

message the outcome of stand-off will send to these neighbouring countries.

For the last two and half months Indian and Chinese troops are engaged in face-off at

the Doklam plateau in Bhutan.

China wants to construct a road through the plateau.

India objects to the road and has deployed army.

A LARGE-MULTI-LATERAL EXERCISE OF INDIAN OCEAN LITTORAL COUNTRIES

For the first time ever Bangladesh - which now heads the Indian Ocean Naval Symposium

(IONS) - with the help of India will be organising a large Naval exercise involving over a dozen

countries.

The IONS is an India initiative to increase maritime cooperation among navies of the littoral

states of the Indian Ocean Region.

The IONS was conceived by the UPA government to get "friendly" navies of the region together

to counter the increased aggressiveness of China in the Indian Ocean region.

The exercise - likely to see participation from over a dozen countries - is likely to

be held in the Bay of Bengal.

The IONS platform had become dormant in the past-few years, "we have decided to revitalize

the platform," a senior Ministry of Defence official told India Today and added "a large

exercise with the participation of several littoral countries sends a tacit but a clear

message."

REACHING OUT TO THE NEIGHBOURS

While China has been reaching out with big bucks, India has decided to take a more benign

approach.

Indian Navy is launching the Sambandh initiative - Naval officers and cadets from smaller countries

that do not have big navies will now be welcome aboard INS Vikramaditya -India's aircraft

carrier- Kolkatta class destroyer- the state of the art stealth guided missile destroyer

- INS Kalvari - Scorpene Class diesel- electric submarine etc.

"Cadets and officers of smaller navies will get flavour of blue-water navy and how big

navies are organised," a senior officer said.

Cadets and officers from countries like Bangladesh, Kenya, Oman, Tanzania, Malaysia, Thailand

and Vietnam etc will soon be on these platforms.

South Block has already given its clearance to the initiative.

MOBILE TRAINING TEAM

Apart from the Sambandh initiate the Indian Navy is reaching out to the neighbourhood

extending his training out-reach programme.

Training teams of the Indian Navy will now be going to neighbouring countries.

"Many countries aren't able to send their officers, cadets to a foreign country for

training, this initiative will be plug that gap," a senior officer said.

Each Mobile Training Team (MTT) will comprise 8 to 10 officers and can train more of officers

at their home bases the officer added.

Bangladesh has already asked India to set-up its submarine naval training school.

Earlier, India had trained a group of its submarine cadets at the Visakhapatnam based

INS Satavahana.

The Navy has been approached by the countries Thailand, Sri Lanka, Myanmar for MTT.

MORE PERMANENT DEPLOYMENT OF INDIAN WARSHIPS

Indian Naval warships will now be permanently deployed at the Malacca Straits -the crucial

strait connecting the Indian Ocean, Pacific Ocean linking major Asian economies such as

India, China, Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea- and Indian warships will be more visible at

Sunda Straits - a crucial passage that connects Indian Ocean to Eastern Asia.

About 70 per cent of the global trade by value passes through the Malacca and Sunda Straits.

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