US, Indonesia kick off largest-ever ‘Garuda Shield’ military exercise
BenarNews staff 2022.08.01
A soldier runs through red smoke with a Bangalore torpedo during Exercise Garuda Shield at the Baturaja Training Area, Indonesia, Aug. 12, 2021.
U.S. Army/U.S. Department of Defense
Updated at 5:18 p.m. ET on 2022-08-01
Indonesia and the United States kicked off their largest annual joint military exercise on Monday, with Australia, Singapore and Japan also participating, in a show of defense partnership amid rising tensions in the Indo-Pacific region.
The “Super Garuda Shield” exercise is “significantly larger in scope and scale than previous exercises, with many nations participating or observing for the first time,” said the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta.
About 4,000 mostly Indonesian and U.S. troops are taking part in the two-week drills on Sumatra and Kalimantan, the Indonesian part of Borneo island.
“This is a purely military-to-military exercise,” Maj. Gen. Stephen Smith, commander of the participating U.S. troops, said during a press briefing in Jakarta on Friday.
“This is not a threat or should not be viewed as a threat to anybody, anywhere,” Smith said.
Last week, China announced a series of live-fire drills in the contested South China Sea amid reports of a potential visit to Taiwan by U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
Pelosi and her congressional delegation arrived in Singapore on Monday, at the start of a tour of Indo-Pacific nations. She was due to visit Kuala Lumpur on Tuesday, with Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob hosting her for lunch, an aide to the Malaysian leader said.
While Taiwan wasn’t on Pelosi’s official four-country itinerary, sources told Radio Free Asia (RFA) and other media that she would make an unofficial trip on Tuesday night to Taiwan. RFA is an online news service affiliated with BenarNews.
The United States doesn't recognize Taiwan diplomatically, but retains close unofficial ties with Taipei and is obligated by law to provide it with defense capabilities. Beijing considers the self-ruling, democratic island a breakaway province, to be united with the mainland by force if necessary, and objects strongly to high-level U.S. visits.