Phillip Coorey, March 28, 2012
As part of enhanced US-Australian military co-operation
announced in November by Julia Gillard and the US President, Barack Obama, the
islands would replace the US's present Indian Ocean base of Diego Garcia, which
the US leases from the British and is due to be mothballed in 2016.
The Washington Post reported yesterday that
the US was eyeing the Cocos
Islands, 2700 kilometres east of Diego Garcia, as ''an ideal site not only for
manned US
surveillance aircraft but for Global Hawks, an unarmed, high-altitude
surveillance drone''
''Aircraft based in the Cocos would be well
positioned to launch spy flights over the South China Sea ,''
the Post
reported.
When Mr Obama visited Australia
in November, he and Ms Gillard announced an increased US presence in Australia
that experts said was all about containing a rising China . The three priorities were an
increased rotation of up to 2500 US Marines through the Northern
Territory , more US
war planes using NT air bases, and increased access by US Navy ships and
submarines to the HMAS Stirling base in Western
Australia .
After Mr Obama's visit, the Defence Minister, Stephen Smith, hinted that US
ships and aircraft would use the Cocos Islands
eventually.
''But that's well down the track. Indeed, there would be a requirement for
substantial infrastructure changes to be made for further air or naval
engagement through the Cocos Islands ,'' he
said in late November.
Speaking yesterday at a nuclear security summit in South Korea , Ms Gillard said ''there has not
been any substantial progress'' on using the Cocos Islands
since Mr Smith's comments last year.
She said the focus had been on implementing the arrangement that was struck
about the deployment of Marines.
''Clearly, the alliance we have with the United States is pivotal to our
security. It's of long standing and we took the next natural step in my view in
the evolution of that alliance last year when I agreed with President Obama
that we would host the Marines on a rotational basis in the Northern Territory
exercises.''
Yesterday, a spokesman for Mr Smith said the details of drones, planes and
ships using the Cocos Islands had yet to be
discussed.
''Cocos Islands is a longer-term option for closer Australian-US engagement
but is not one of the three priority levels of engagement,'' he said.
''In the first instance, our Indian Ocean arrangement will be, in my view,
greater naval access to [HMAS Stirling ].''
The maritime version of the Grumman Global Hawk drone is likely to be
introduced into the defence forces of both countries later this decade, under a
program known as Broad Area Maritime Surveillance.
With a wingspan of almost 40 metres, it can cruise for 30 hours at a speed
of 575 km/h, covering a vast expanse of ocean with its cameras, radar and other
sensors.
The news that they are becoming part of Mr Obama's ''pivot'' into
south-east Asia is slowly seeping out among the 600 residents of the Cocos Islands .
The caretaker-manager at Cocos Beach Bungalows, who gave his name as Bill,
said he had seen reports on the internet but had not noticed any unusual
activity, aside from the occasional air force plane with mechanical trouble.
The islands attract a handful of tourists each year, mainly snorkellers and
birdwatchers.
For the Royal Australian Air Force, the Global Hawk will be part of the mix
replacing its maritime patrol aircraft, the four-engine turboprop P3C Orion,
along with a new manned aircraft, a development of the twin-jet Boeing 737
called the P8 Poseidon.
''The idea is to integrate drones and aircraft so you need fewer manned
aircraft,'' said Derek Woolner, a defence expert at the Australian National
University .
The progress report of the Defence Force Posture Review recommends the
upgrade of the Cocos airfield
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