Standing on the deck of a Pakistani warship and pointing to the
blue waters of the Arabian Sea, Pakistani President Pervez
Musharraf said: "China-Pakistan relations are deeper than this
sea."
Musharraf, who was witnessing a multinational naval exercise,
said on Saturday that like the relationship between the two
countries, the ties between the navies of Pakistan and China are
also strong.
He added the two navies must cooperate for peace and security on
the seas.
"This is an excellent exercise. It has a great tactical and
operational value for the navy; they learn when they integrate
exercises with so many countries," he said.
The participation of a large number of countries observers from
27 nations and physical participation of eight bears testimony to
the fact that Pakistan is determined to work with other
peace-loving nations to make the seas safe and secure, Musharraf
said.
Reviewing warships and an aerial display in the major exercise
hosted by the Pakistan navy codenamed "Aman 07," he said the drills
also send a strong message to terrorists that they are not allowed
to disrupt peace and security in the world.
At the invitation of the Pakistan navy, the Chinese navy sent
two frigates with more than 400 naval personnel on board and joined
most programs in the maneuvers.
Although it is the first time that the Chinese navy participated
in such a multinational naval exercise, the task force showed its
professionalism by organizing the search and rescue part of the
military exercise.
The two Chinese frigates Lianyungang and Sanming
will leave Karachi Navy Dockyard tomorrow and take about two weeks
before returning home with a stopover in Indonesia.
It is the first time that Chinese navy vessels have traveled so
far without being accompanied by a replenishment tanker.
"It gives us a chance to learn how to survive without food and
oil in a big tanker floating nearby," said Commander Wei Xiaodong,
who is also the Chinese observer for the week-long exercise.
"To refuel our warships, we have to coordinate well with foreign
ports along the route," Wei said.
In its 7,000-km-plus journey from east China's Zhejiang Province
to Karachi in southern Pakistan, the frigates stopped for 6 hours
in Colombo, capital of Sri Lanka, for replenishment.
(China Daily March 12, 2007)