Vietnam eyes Western warplanes, patrol aircraft to counter China

Vietnam is in talks with European and US contractors to buy fighter jets, maritime patrol planes and unarmed drones, sources said, as it looks to beef up its aerial defences in the face of China's growing assertiveness in disputed waters.

>>Reuters
Published : 5 June 2015, 03:29 PM
Updated : 5 June 2015, 03:29 PM

The battle-hardened country has already taken possession of three Russian-built Kilo-attack submarines and has three more on order as part of a $2.6 billion deal agreed in 2009.
 
Upgrading its air force would give Vietnam one of the most potent militaries in Southeast Asia.
 
The previously unreported aircraft discussions have involved Swedish defence contractor Saab, European consortium Eurofighter, the defence wing of Airbus Group and US firms Lockheed Martin Corp and Boeing, said industry sources with direct knowledge of the talks.
 
Defence contractors had made multiple visits to Vietnam in recent months although no deals were imminent, said the sources, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.
 
Some of the sources characterised the talks as ongoing.
 

A Polish Casa C-295 drops cargo bags with parachutes during joint training exercises of the Canada's 3rd Battalion Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, US Army's 173rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team and the Polish 6 Airborne Brigade soldiers at Land Forces Training Centre in Oleszno near Drawsko Pomorskie, northwest Poland, in this June 9, 2014 file photo. Reuters

One Western defence contractor said Hanoi wanted to modernise its air force by replacing more than 100 ageing Russian MiG-21 fighters while reducing its reliance on Moscow for weapons for its roughly 480,000-strong military.
Vietnam has ordered about a dozen more Russian Sukhoi Su-30 front-line fighters to supplement a fleet of older Su-27s and Su-30s.
"We had indications they want to reduce their dependence on Russia. Their growing friendship with America and Europe will help them to do that," said the defence contractor.
US Defence Secretary Ash Carter, during a visit to Vietnam on Sunday, pledged $18 million to help Hanoi buy US patrol boats.
But any deal with Lockheed or Boeing would likely be the most significant involving a US firm since Washington started easing a long-time embargo on the sale of lethal weapons to Vietnam in October.
The Vietnamese Foreign Ministry said it had forwarded questions from Reuters about the aircraft discussions to the appropriate authorities.
Boeing said in an email it believed it had capabilities in "intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance platforms that may meet Vietnam's modernisation needs". It gave no specifics.
Lockheed and Saab declined to comment. Eurofighter and Airbus did not respond to a request for comment.
Chinese oil rig
While communist parties rule both Vietnam and China and annual trade has risen to nearly $60 billion, Vietnam has long been wary of China, especially over Beijing's claims to most of the South China Sea.
China's placement of an oil rig in waters claimed by Vietnam for more than two months last year infuriated Vietnam and underscored the coastal country's need to upgrade its maritime patrol capabilities in particular.
Vietnam's military budget is a state secret, although data collated by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) put defence spending at $3.4 billion in 2013, more than double the amount a decade ago.
Experts say actual spending could be much higher given the hardware acquired over recent years.

A Eurofighter Typhoon aircraft of the Austrian Air force performs during the AirPower 13 air show at the Hinterstoisser air base in Zeltweg in this June 28, 2013 file photo. Reuters

Among the aircraft under discussion with Vietnam were Saab's Gripen E fourth-generation fighter jet as well as the Saab 340 or 2000 twin-engine turboprops fitted with maritime patrol and airborne early warning systems, said a source with direct knowledge of those talks.
Vietnam had held talks over the Typhoon warplane made by Eurofighter as well as the F/A-50 light fighter jointly developed by Korea Aerospace Industries and Lockheed, separate sources said.
Lockheed had discussed its Sea Hercules, the maritime patrol version of its C-130 transport plane.
Meanwhile, an additional source said Boeing wanted to sell its maritime surveillance aircraft programme, which involves putting state-of-the-art P-8 Poseidon plane surveillance technology, although not anti-submarine capabilities, on a business jet.
Vietnam had also looked at unarmed surveillance drones made by Western and Asian contractors.
Vietnam war legacy
Vietnam has already started moving slowly away from Russia in recent years, buying Canadian Twin Otter amphibious planes and Airbus Defence CASA C-212 maritime patrol aircraft for its coastguard and Airbus C-295 transport planes.
Airbus Defence had been in talks to offer maritime patrol and airborne early warning systems on the C-295, a source said.
In addition, Airbus Helicopters had been in preliminary talks with the Vietnamese military.

Engineers assemble an FA-50, South Korea's first home-built light fighter, at an assembly plant of the Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) in Sacheon in this August 14, 2013 file photo. Reuters

Despite increasingly warm ties with Washington, some experts said the legacy of the Vietnam War might make Hanoi wary about buying too much US weaponry, possibly giving Sweden an edge.
"There is no ideological bias (in Vietnam) with Sweden," said Tim Huxley, executive director of the International Institute of Strategic Studies in Asia.
"The Gripen E will be a cost-effective option. Saab can offer a package that includes maritime patrol and airborne early warning aircraft."
However, one US source familiar with Vietnam's goals said Hanoi saw Washington as a more reliable partner should tension with China escalate.
"Vietnam is interested in building a much closer relationship with the United States, but they also don't want to anger China," said the source, who was not authorised to speak publicly.
"They're looking for a balanced, phased, or step-by-step approach.'