Selangor Journal
(from left to right) New Zealand’s Defence Minister Judith Collins, Malaysian Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin, Singaporean Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen, Australian Deputy Prime Minister cum Defence Minister Richard Marles, and the United Kingdom’s Defence Ministry’s director-general of security policy Paul Wyatt, at the Five Power Defence Arrangements (FPDA) Defence Ministers’ joint press conference meeting in Singapore, on May 31, 2024. — Picture by REUTERS

Five powers plan bigger, deeper Asia military drills

SINGAPORE, May 31 — Australia, the United Kingdom (UK), Malaysia, New Zealand, and Singapore have agreed to stage more complex military drills in the region this year involving drones, fifth-generation fighter planes, and surveillance aircraft.

The announcement today by defence ministers from members of the 53-year-old Five Power Defence Arrangement (FPDA) on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue defence meeting in Singapore comes as the tempo of military exercises in Asia increases along with tensions between global powers.

“We are increasing the assets that we are bringing to bear in exercises so (at) Bersama Lima later this year, for the first time, Australia will be contributing F-35 Joint Strike Fighters,” said Australian Deputy Prime Minister cum Defence Minister Richard Marles.

Bersama Lima, “Five Together” in Malay, is an annual military exercise held by the five powers. Last year, it was held in Malaysia.

Marles said running more complicated exercises is an example of increasing ambition in the FPDA’s agenda, while New Zealand’s Defence Minister Judith Collins said a P-8 Poseidon would be deployed to Singapore for the first time as part of the drills.

The P-8 aircraft is the premier United States submarine hunter-tracker and is increasingly deployed in the region against China’s submarine patrols.

Singapore is close to important submarine channels in Indonesia, linking the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean.

Marles said the FPDA was “not about China” but rather about “our desire to work closely together”. Malaysian Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin said this year’s exercises would involve drones, among other “non-conventional” elements.

Representing the UK is its Defence Ministry’s director-general of security policy Paul Wyatt, who said they plan on sending an aircraft carrier to the region in 2025 and had discussed how the tour might fit with the FPDA’s exercise programme.

— Reuters

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