JAKARTA, Indonesia — Indonesia and the United States launched joint military drills on Monday that will last more than a week, joining allies from 11 countries in exercises aimed at ensuring stability in the Asia-Pacific region.

The annual "Super Garuda Shield" drills will take place in the capital Jakarta and several locations on the western island of Sumatra and the Riau archipelago until September 4.
Indonesia, US and allies launch joint military drills
More than 4,100 Indonesian and 1,300 American troops will take part, joined by participants from Australia, Japan, Singapore, France, New Zealand, Britain and other nations.
The US and some allies such as Australia have expressed growing concern about China's increasing assertiveness in the Pacific, but Washington has previously said such drills are not aimed at Beijing.
Samuel Paparo, commander of US Indo-Pacific Command, said this year's exercises were "the largest Super Garuda Shield ever", adding that they would help participating nations boost deterrence, without elaborating.
"It represents deterring anyone that would hope to change the facts on the ground using violence with the collective determination of all participants to uphold the principles of sovereignty," Paparo said at Monday's opening ceremony.
"We do this by getting better every day across all domains... so if the unforgiving hour comes when we need each other as partners, we pick up the phone and we begin operating from a basis of deep trust."
The programme includes staff exercises, cyber defence drills, and a live-fire event, the Indonesian military said.
Countries including India, Papua New Guinea and East Timor also sent observers for the exercise.
Indonesia maintains a neutral foreign policy and tries to keep good relations with Washington and Beijing, walking the diplomatic tightrope in the superpower rivalry., This news data comes from:http://cpm-ee-sf-ajcv.redcanaco.com
- House tackles P881B public works budget amid flood control anomalies
- Taiwan's Lai ups defense spending target to 5% of GDP
- Bonoan resigns, Dizon named DPWH chief
- Vietnam evacuates thousands ahead of Typhoon Kajiki
- Indonesia protests put spotlight on paramilitary police force
- Comelec: Postponed village, youth elections not in 2026 budget
- Washington makes military aid overtures to Sahel juntas
- Lacson clears air over conflict with Marcoleta on flood control probe
- Marcos names Dizon as DPWH secretary
- PNP chief supports lowering age of discernment