Though
Jakarta continues to make some inroads in boosting its capabilities and defense
industry, familiar challenges remain.
On
Tuesday, Indonesia officially launched the fourth in a series of locally-built
fast attack crafts. Though this scheduled event did mark another advance for
Jakarta in its quest to build up its capabilities, it also reinforced the
significant gaps that remain and how far it has left to go.
As I have
noted before, Indonesia has long been engaged in an effort to strengthen the
country’s maritime capabilities in recognition of the sobering reality that it
needs more vessels and aircraft to fully monitor what is the world’s second
longest coastline. Jakarta also wants to boost the country’s nascent but
growing domestic defense industry as well as it builds up its capabilities,
which only compounds that challenge (See: “An Indonesian Defense Revolution
Under Jokowi?”).
Indonesia’s
state-owned shipbuilder PT PAL has been part of that effort, despite the
manifold challenges that it continues to face along the way. In 2018, PT PAL’s
work for the Indonesian military, in addition to exports, was expected to
include the construction for the Indonesian Navy of a submarine, landing
platform docks, and four additional KCR-60 guided missile fast attack craft
following the three that it had already produced, in addition to other routine
repair and maintenance requests (See: “What’s Next for Indonesia’s
Shipbuilding Ambitions in 2018?”).
On
February 27, PT PAL launched the fourth KCR-60M vessel on order for the
Indonesian Navy. The vessel, which will be known as the KRI Kerambit
with pennant number 627 after commissioning, was unveiled at PT PAL’s
facilities in Surabaya, around a year after the steel for the platform was cut.
The
vessel no doubt marks an advance for Indonesia’s military as well as PT PAL. As
Indonesia’s navy chief Ade Supandi rightly noted, these fast attack craft are a
boost for the country’s capabilities because their speed and lethality make
them useful across a range of functions, including for archipelagic warfare.
These
advances also have knock on effects for PT PAL’s overseas endeavors as well. PT
PAL’s director Budiman Saleh has repeatedly stressed that user satisfaction
domestically can help boost confidence for the firm’s products overseas as well
as it seeks more export markets, and he did so once again in remarks quoted by
local media outlets.
But at
the same time, Indonesia and PT PAL both still have a long way to go. As
Indonesia’s navy chief Ade Supandi noted in remarks quoted by local media
outlets, the country needs least 20 more boats by 2024 to strengthen its force
in accordance with targets in its Minimum Essential Force (MEF). Though he
unsurprisingly did not dwell too much on what that meant for PT PAL, he did
indicate that it would have to increase its human resources to support that
target.
Supandi’s
remarks are consistent with the remaining gaps that Saleh and others familiar
with Indonesia’s defense industry have recognized. The extent to which these
gaps can be filled, however, remains to be seen.
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