Vietnam coast guard holds rare live fire exercise

The drills are aimed at strengthening combat readiness amid rising tension in the South China Sea.

Vietnam’s coast guard has held a rare live fire exercise to test responses to security threats, in an area off its central coast on the South China Sea.

The Sept. 5-11 exercise was conducted by the Vietnam Coast Guard Region 3, in the waters off Binh Thuan province, the force said in a press release.

Coast Guard Region 3 with headquarters in Ba Ria-Vung Tau province is one of Vietnam’s four coast guard zones, responsible for safeguarding its claims in the South China Sea as tensions are rising in the regional waterway.

The tactical training and live five exercise – aimed at boosting combat readiness – is “one of the top priorities” of the coast guard, Col. Nguyen Minh Khanh, Region 3’s deputy commander, was quoted as saying.

Coast guard personnel were responding to multiple scenarios such as "threats to sovereignty and security," illegal incursions into Vietnam’s waters by foreign vessels, piracy and search-and-rescue and disaster relief.

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Vietnam coast guard personnel during live fire exercises Sept. 5-11, 2024. (Vietnam Coast Guard)

Photographs and video clips released by the coast guard show troops, equipped with artillery, anti-aircraft guns and rocket launchers, shooting at airborne targets as well as firing water cannons and warning off foreign ships.

“They have accomplished all the tasks with excellence,” Col. Khanh said.

Vietnam rarely publicizes such activities despite having invested heavily in developing its coast guard in recent years.

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The U.S. coast guard is reportedly planning to transfer the last of three Hamilton-class cutters to Vietnam in the near future.

Maritime security is a defense priority for Vietnam, one of six parties that claim parts of the South China Sea, along with China, Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines and Taiwan.

China, however, holds the most expansive claim and its authorities have become more aggressive against neighboring countries in disputed waters.

This month, coast guard vessels from Vietnam and the Philippines took part in their first joint drills off Manila but they limited their activity to firefighting and search-and-rescue as Vietnam is careful not to be seen as siding militarily with any country.

The Philippines and China have this year been in a tense standoff over disputed features in the South China Sea.

The Philippines last week recalled a coast guard vessel from the disputed Sabina Shoal but officials pledged never to “abandon our sovereign rights over these waters.”

Edited by Mike Firn.