Don't forget to check out our report by Andrew Erickson and Austin Strange:
Six Years at Sea… And Counting: Gulf of Aden Anti-Piracy and China's Maritime Commons Presence
Andrew S. Erickson and Austin Strange
Available July 30, 2015
Well over six years of Chinese
anti-piracy operations in the Gulf of Aden have directly supported
People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) modernization goals and provided
invaluable experience operating in distant waters. Lessons learned have
spawned PLAN innovations in doctrine, operations, and international
coordination. Many of the insights gleaned during deployments are
applicable to security objectives closer to home; some officers enjoy
promotion to important positions after returning. Anti-piracy operations
have been a springboard for China to expand considerably its maritime
security operations, from evacuating its citizens from Libya and Yemen
to escorting Syrian chemical weapons to their destruction and
participating in the search for Malaysia
Airlines Flight 370. So great are the benefits to China's global
maritime presence and enhanced image at home and abroad that when Gulf
of Aden anti-piracy operations finally wind down, Beijing will have to
develop new means to address its burgeoning overseas interests.
Andrew S. Erickson, Ph.D., is an
Associate Professor in the Strategic Research Department at the U.S.
Naval War College and a core founding member of the department’s China
Maritime Studies Institute. He serves on the Naval War College Review’s
Editorial Board. Since 2008, he has been an Associate in Research at
Harvard University’s John King Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies.
Erickson is also an expert contributor to the Wall Street Journal’s
China Real Time Report. He runs the research websites www.andrewerickson. com. and www.chinasignpost.com.
Austin Strange is a Ph.D student in
Harvard University’s Department of Government and a Research Associate
at AidData, a research and innovation lab of the Institute for the
Theory and Practice of International Relations based at The College of
William & Mary. Formerly, he served as a researcher at the China
Maritime Studies Institute of the Strategic Research Department of the
U.S. Naval War College. He has studied at the College of Public
Administration and Center for Non-Traditional Security and Peaceful
Development Studies at Zhejiang University (M.S.) and the College of
William & Mary (B.A.).
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