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Maritime Affairs Program (MAP) Handbill Spotlight

Joint Naval Exercise

Jessica Martin

April 25, 2023

Issue Background

Joint military exercises is a relatively new strategic concept credited to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization alliance who has been conducting such exercises since 1951. A ‘joint naval exercise’ can be loosely defined as a structured, planned military exercise conducted between the naval or maritime units of two or more nations, typically with the end goal of strengthening the abilities, knowledge, interoperability and friendly relations of the parties involved. In another description, they aim “to project capabilities, hone operational skills, imbibe best practices and procedures, and enable mutual doctrinal learning” and are “used as a demonstration of close strategic relation among participating countries and also for political signalling.” Additionally, they are “often used by nations to display their military might” and typically conducted between friendly nations or neighbors. 

While joint naval exercises can occur in one-off instances, they are more often regularly occurring, in which case the exercise is given a unique reference name (i.e., Joint WarriorMalabarResolute Hunter, or RIMPAC). Furthermore, the length and number of participants of joint naval exercises can vary extensively, depending on the end goal of the exercise and past precedents.

As noted by the term ‘joint’, joint naval exercises are different from—and even more telling than—naval exercises, drills or activities individually conducted by a single nation, such as China’s recent unilateral naval exercises around Taiwan in April or the U.S. Navy’s frequent freedom of navigation operations (FONOPs) around the globe. Joint naval exercises also differ from joint naval patrolling, the latter of which has been described as “a cooperative operational deployment of navies for addressing common maritime threats or challenges” such as piracy, illegal fishing, human trafficking and other maritime crimes.

Recent Events

While they may not make headline news, joint naval exercises are happening around the world on a regular basis. The first part of 2023 has seen an abnormally high number of joint naval exercises—and their subsequent potential political messages—getting global attention.

To start, some of the regular, annual exercises were held in the first quarter of the year, several of which were marked as their largest ever. The 12th interaction of Exercise Obangame Express, the largest multinational maritime exercise in Western and Central Africa, ran from January 23-February 3 out of Nigeria and involved 32 participating nations. The 8th installment of the near-annual International Maritime Exerciseinvolving 50 participating countries and employing “more than 7,000 personnel, 35 ships and more than 30 unmanned AI systems,” was held for 18 days in February in the Middle East. Nearby, the largest ever U.S.-Israeli Exercise Juniper Oak was held one month earlier. Exercise Balikatan, the most significant annual exercise between the U.S. and the Philippines, was launched on April 11 in its largest iteration yet and is set to run through April 28. The bilateral U.S.-Republic of Korea Exercise Ssang Yong ran from March 23-April 3 around the Korean Peninsula. Exercise Noble Dina, a two-week long training between Greece, France, Cyprus, Italy and the U.S. in the Mediterranean, was held in late March. Exercise Arctic Forge, a month-long effort between the U.S., Africa and Europe that focuses on interoperability and training in the Arctic region, was held in February and March.

Image: Capt. Tony Chavez, commanding officer of amphibious assault ship USS Makin Island (LHD 8), left center, and Capt. Andria Slough, executive officer of Makin Island, front right, give a tour of the flight deck for Vice Adm. Myung Soo Kim, commander, Republic of Korea (ROK) Fleet, center, during a key leader engagement aboard Makin Island for Operation Ssang Yong 2023 (SY23), held March 24 in South Korea. SY23 is a U.S./ROK joint landing drill to strengthen the alliance’s combat readiness, ensure tailored capabilities for defense, and improve interoperability to protect peace by strength. (Photo By: Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Joshua Martinez, Public Domain)

There are also several first or near-first cases being held that strongly suggest the formation or strengthening of a new or existing partnership. The European Union and the U.S. held their first-ever joint maritime security exercise in the Indo-Pacific from March 23-24, as agreed upon in the latest round of the EU-U.S. High-Level Consultations on the Indo-Pacific on December 2, 2022. Last November, the U.S., the United Kingdom and Saudi Arabia held the weeklong Exercise Nautical Defender in the Arabian Gulf. Ahead of the 42nd case of the multinational, Indo-Pacific based Exercise Cobra Gold being held in February, the U.S. Navy SEALs and Royal Thai Special Warfare Command held the first iteration of a three-week collaboration now titled Exercise Flash Torch. Egypt and Sudan held the first iteration of Exercise SUD-EGY-T in Sudan in early April while India and Sri Lanka’s bilateral Exercise SLINEX took place April 6-8.

Somewhat similar to the United States’ own level of joint naval activities, China’s naval forces have been particularly active in an apparent pursuit of showcasing their partnerships, the extent of their reach, and their growing military capabilities. China, Russia and Iran held Exercise Security Bond, a newly-formalized joint exercise in the Gulf of Oman with other unnamed countries, in mid-March, further building on an apparent strengthening of naval ties that has been growing for more than a year. China, Russia and South Africa held the second iteration of joint naval exercises (the first being in 2019) from February 17-27, taking place in the Indian Ocean. Russia and China have been holding bilateral naval exercises in December 2022 off the southern coast of China and in the East China Sea, advertised as efforts to “further deepen” their partnership. Apart from Russia, China also held its first joint maritime exercise with Cambodia, code-named Golden Dragon, in March, and just announced joint naval drills with Singapore to be held from late April to early May.

The last few months have also seen joint naval exercises be specific responses to other diplomatic or military activities; an increasingly regular—and increasingly publicized—practice. In mid-April, the U.S., South Korea and Japan started holding joint naval missile defense exercises “to improve responses to North Korean threats” as part of new agreements from talks in Washington on April 14. Several of the above-mentioned cases, such as the U.S. and European Union’s new exercise promoting “high seas freedom of navigation,” could also be direct responses to some extent.

Keep In Mind

Again, joint naval exercises are not rare. What is notable is how the last few months have culminated in what appears to not be only increased activities but increased attention by the larger public and diplomatic representatives. Part of this increase could be credited to the reduction in Covid-19 related pauses, new launches of naval vessels, and expanding developments in naval technologies.

Virtually as important as their role in enhancing technical interoperability is the political and social power of joint naval exercises. They are regularly mentioned in high-level speeches as signs of mutual cooperation and in lists of how nations can hope to improve cooperative relations. Regardless of whether these exercises being held these last four months have been their first or their fifteenth, they—and the associated increase in public interest in them—are indicators of a heightened attention to maritime security and, in some cases, unavoidable indicators of where true loyalties lie. Nations understandably limit the amount of information granted to the public regarding a joint naval exercise, but the list of participating nations or parties as well as the length of the exercise is nearly always readily provided. This indicates the importance of the ‘invitation list’ and ‘participation list’ and is typically the largest takeaway from any announcement of a joint naval exercise: Who is involved, and has the participation list changed? The case of China being ‘disinvited’ from participating in the 2018 RIMPAC Exercise, a major, publicly-dealt blow to Beijing received with mixed global responses, is a key example showing the interplay between joint military exercises and global diplomacy.

Aside from participants, the size, frequency, length and focus of the exercises are important and telling features to note of any exercise. For example, this year’s Balikatan, a word in Tagalog which means ‘shoulder-to-shoulder’, is the “largest ever” with more than 17,600 sailors, Marines, soldiers and airmen participating and is taking place during a time of significant shift in Philippine policy.

What is dangerous is how these ironically public-yet-secretive events all but invite speculation by observers—and at all levels. For example, there has been a flurry of attention over the numerous trilateral naval exercises between Russia, China and South Africa and what it might mean in the context of the Ukraine-Russia conflict, for U.S.-China-South Africa relations, and for Indian Ocean and African geopolitics. In the case of U.S.-China relations, which has arguably reached its lowest and most tense point, joint military exercises have become a case study or statistic to point at and use in the ever-popular verbal arguments. Like cases of unilateral military exercises, they have the potential to be unabashedly used as silent diplomatic tools of disapproval and disagreement in reaction to another party’s actions. 

That is why, when hearing about a joint naval exercise being held, understanding the active context—both inside and outside of the military realm—is important to most accurately deciphering a nation’s mindset and intent. One of the first questions that should be asked, prior to any speculations being drawn, is regarding the establishment of context. Often shrouded in succinct press releases with minimized public details, joint naval exercises are powerful, public, silent tools that can be used to gauge the strength of two or more nations’ current state of alliance. More important than the number and types of troops and ships used, it is the location, timing, duration and participants that should be more thoroughly examined. Furthermore, it can be dangerous for non-military experts to be overinterpreting actions, just as it is dangerous for non-legal experts to be independently arguing on behalf of or against a concept with legal implications. When debating over joint naval drills, or any other military-intensive subject for that matter, observers should value the words of military professionals in the field over those of domestic, non-military political leaders.

This Spotlight was originally released with Volume 2, Issue 4 of the ICAS MAP Handbill, published on April 25, 2023.

This issue’s Spotlight was written by Jessica Martin, ICAS Research Associate & Chief Editor, ICAS Newsletters.

Maritime Affairs Program Spotlights are a short-form written background and analysis of a specific issue related to maritime affairs, which changes with each issue. The goal of the Spotlight is to help our readers quickly and accurately understand the basic background of a vital topic in maritime affairs and how that topic relates to ongoing developments today.

There is a new Spotlight released with each issue of the ICAS Maritime Affairs Program (MAP) Handbill – a regular newsletter released the last Tuesday of every month that highlights the major news stories, research products, analyses, and events occurring in or with regard to the global maritime domain during the past month.

ICAS Maritime Affairs Handbill (online ISSN 2837-3901, print ISSN 2837-3871) is published the last Tuesday of the month throughout the year at 1919 M St NW, Suite 310, Washington, DC 20036.
The online version of ICAS Maritime Affairs Handbill can be found at chinaus-icas.org/icas-maritime-affairs-program/map-handbill/.