http://www.smh.com.au/world/indonesian-jets-in-australian-war-games-20120717-228f3.html
Indonesian jets in Australian war games
  Date July 18, 2012 
Lindsay Murdoch and Michael Bachelard
 
Prime Minister Julia Gillard meets Indonesian President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono in Darwin earlier this month. Photo: Glenn Campbell

INDONESIA will send its front-line Sukhoi jet fighters to take part in 
Australia's largest air combat exercise this month, signalling a new era of 
enhanced defence co-operation between the two countries.

The Indonesian air force has not previously given the Australian Defence Force 
access to the Russian-made aircraft, which were built to compete with the 
fourth-generation jet fighters of the US.

Four Sukhois will be in the Northern Territory for Exercise Pitch Black 2012, 
which will include mock combat with Australian F/A-18s in Australian and 
Indonesian airspace.

US jet fighters will participate in the exercise from July 27 to August 17, and 
will be commanded from Darwin and Tindal air bases.

Military analyst John Farrell said the decision to send the Sukhois to 
Australia would bring defence co-operation between the ADF and Indonesian 
military to a new level.

''Indonesia has never before been prepared to send its primary air defence 
asset to a foreign nation,'' said Mr Farrell, who publishes the Australian & NZ 
Defender Magazine.

''That 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-27s 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.''

It is also a vote of confidence in the defence relationship after Indonesia 
expressed concern over US marines operating from a joint facility in Darwin.

Indonesian air force spokesman Colonel Agung Sasongkojati confirmed to The Age 
the plan to send jets to Australia for Pitch Black.

Colonel Sasongkojati said the air force had needed to train its pilots on the 
aircraft before it could deploy them in the joint exercise.

Indonesia's air force has been on a buying spree recently. It already operates 
10 Sukhoi-27s and four Sukhoi-30 MK2 jets, and recently announced a new order 
for six Sukhoi-30 MK2 fighters.

A joint communique issued after the July 3 meeting between Indonesian President 
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and 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.

Canberra's military ties with Jakarta have been strained over many years. 
Relations hit their lowest point in 1999, when Australian troops were sent to 
East Timor to quell violence by pro-Indonesian military militia groups.

But in recent years the military-to-military relationship warmed as Australia 
provided expertise to Indonesia's security forces to counter terrorist groups.

The decision to send the Sukhois to Australia is believed to have been approved 
by Dr Yudhoyono.


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