Singapore Approves U.S. Surveillance Flights | Foreign Policy

Singapore is granting the United States permission to fly sophisticated surveillance aircraft out of its territory to better monitor China’s island-building in the South China Sea, Foreign Policy has learned.The defense agreement to be unveiled Monday reflects Singapore’s concerns over China’s assertive stance on territorial disputes. It also points to a broader trend among countries…

Singapore is granting the United States permission to fly sophisticated surveillance aircraft out of its territory to better monitor China’s island-building in the South China Sea, Foreign Policy has learned.The defense agreement to be unveiled Monday reflects Singapore’s concerns over China’s assertive stance on territorial disputes. It also points to a broader trend among countries in the region to seek out the United States as a counterweight to China’s expansionist moves in the contested waterway.Two Pentagon officials said the deal will permit the U.S. Navy to operate P-8 Poseidon planes from Singapore’s airfields, providing Washington with a strategic vantage point to track Beijing’s military activity in the South China Sea, which is home to more than $5 trillion worth of commercial shipping.

Source: Singapore Approves U.S. Surveillance Flights | Foreign Policy

That’s not terribly surprising, as Singapore already lets the US use Singapore as a forward operating base for its LCS deployments to the Pacific.

What is interesting is that apparently Malaysia has extended a similar invitation for P-8 operations. Relations with Malaysia are pretty friendly, but they, like Indonesia, generally maintain that they are non-aligned.

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Responses to “Singapore Approves U.S. Surveillance Flights | Foreign Policy”

  1. Paul L. Quandt

    To echo Glenn Reynolds; things are moving as I have foreseen.

    Paul

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  2. LT Rusty
  3. LT Rusty

    dammit, try that again…

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  4. John Griffiths (@Griffiths_John)

    Unlike Indonesia, Malaysia is part of the Five Power Defence Arrangement (United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia and Singapore).

    Also Australia maintains an air base out out RMAF Butterworth in Penang (specifically surveillance planes).

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RMAF_Butterworth

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Power_Defence_Arrangements

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  5. FM

    Yep. Ultimately the existing Aust P-3 detachment in Butterworth will become an Aust P-8 Det. With another at Darwin.

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