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Royal Brunei Navy

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Royal Brunei Navy
Malay: Tentera Laut Diraja Brunei
Jawi: تنترا لاوت ديراجا بروني
Badge of Royal Brunei Navy
Founded1 October 1991
(33 years, 1 month)
(in current form)

14 June 1965
(59 years, 5 months)
(as the Boat Section)


Country Brunei
TypeNavy
RoleNaval warfare
Search and rescue
Law enforcement
Part of Royal Brunei Armed Forces
HeadquartersMuara Naval Base, Brunei-Muara, Brunei
Anniversaries14 June
EquipmentSee list
Websitenavy.mindef.gov.bn
Commanders
CommanderCapt Mohamad Sarif Pudin (acting)[3]
Deputy CommanderCapt Khairil Abdul Rahman (acting)[1]
Fleet CommanderCapt Sahibul Bahari[2]
Chief of StaffCapt Azrin Mahmud[4]
Sergeant MajorWO1 Haji Zaini (Acting)
Insignia
Naval ensign
Naval jack

The Royal Brunei Navy (RBN), natively known as Tentera Laut Diraja Brunei (TLDB) is the naval force of Brunei. It is a small but relatively well-equipped military force whose main responsibility is to conduct search and rescue missions, and to deter and defend the Brunei waters against attack mounted by seaborne forces.[5]

The forerunner of the RBN was established on 14 June 1965, the second unit created after the formation of the Royal Brunei Armed Forces (RBAF). The RBN is based and headquartered at Muara Naval Base, 4 kilometres (2 miles) from Muara Town, with the majority of the enlisted sailors being Malays. Since 1977, the RBN has been equipped with missile gun boats and other coastal patrol craft. All the ships names are prefixed KDB, as in Kapal Diraja Brunei (Royal Brunei Ship in Malay). Captain Haji Mohamad Sarif Pudin has been acting commander of the RBN since 30 December 2022,[3] succeeding First Admiral Pengiran Dato Seri Pahlawan Norazmi who was appointed the RBN 12th commander on 13 March 2015.[5] The annual anniversary ceremony of RBN's inception was place on 14 June every year.[6]

History

[edit]

Early years

[edit]

The fourth anniversary parade was celebrated on 31 May 1965, and the unit was thereafter dubbed the Royal Brunei Malay Regiment (RBMR). Additionally, Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah declared that the regiment will shortly be outfitted with swift patrol boats, armoured vehicles, helicopters, and hovercraft.[7] The Boat Section was formed on 14 June 1965, four years after the formation of the RBMR. Its manning strength was only eighteen personnel, including one officer from the First Battalion who had attended a basic military course in Federation of Malaya in 1961 until 1964.[8] Important military equipment, including motor gunboats, helicopters, and hovercraft, was acquired in 1966. On 12 March 1966, a Borneo Bulletin Report said that the RBMR was the only infantry unit in the world to get a modern SR.N5 hovercraft for use in combat.[7] The Boat Section was equipped with a number of aluminium boats (natively known as Temuai) and fast assault boats (FABs). The role of the section was solely to provide transportation of infantry elements to the interior of Brunei.[8]

As the organisation expanded with the aid of stable economic growth, the Boat Section was renamed the Boat Company in 1966.[8] The company received three river patrol boats in 1966, consisted of KDB Bendahara, KDB Maharajalela, and KDB Kermaindera. All the ships were crewed by locals and led by a qualified commanding officer.[9] As the RBMR's strength increased in 1967, things started to happen quickly. Vosper Limited of Portsmouth, UK, produced the fast patrol boat KDB Pahlawan, which was put into service.[7] In 1968, the strength of the Boat Company was enhanced with Westland Saunders Roe SR.N6 hovercraft.[10][11][9] The first fast patrol craft was accepted in 1968 and named KDB Pahlawan. It became the first flagship for the Boat Company.[9]

The Boat Company was reorganised as the First Flotilla, RBMR, or natively known as Angkatan Laut Pertama, Askar Melayu Diraja Brunei (ALP AMDB).[12] While visiting the Muara Base in 1969 to observe an air and sea rescue exercise, retired Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddien III hoisted the new ensign created for the flotilla under the command of the KDB Pahlawan, which was initially launched in December 1966 by then Crown Princess Saleha.[7]

KDB Saleha in 1971

During that time, the estimated strength of the First Flotilla was forty-two personnel, including an officer, while assets consisted of one fast patrol craft, three river patrol boats, two hovercraft vessels, FABs, a few long boats, and Temuai.[12] KDB Saleha and KDB Masna, named after Princess Masna Bolkiah, were purchased in 1970; however, they didn't arrive in Brunei until 26 January 1971.[13] With a peak speed of 25 knots (46 km/h; 29 mph), the wooden-hulled boats were outfitted with light machine guns on the bridge and Oerlikon 20 mm cannons fore and aft. A revised 1971 Brunei-UK Agreement transferred all internal security responsibilities from Britain to the Sultanate, with the UK solely being accountable for Brunei's exterior defense. The SR.N6 hovercraft was acquired in the same year. Under the new Army Enactment, new service regulations went into effect on 1 June 1971.[7]

The British Army's tri-service regulations, which addressed offenses in the air force, navy, and army as well, served as the model for the new disciplinary regulations. The flagship KDB Pahlawan, which was acquired by the RBMR Sea Wing in 1976, was instrumental in enabling the British-officered Brunei flotilla to become the most formidable indigenous naval group in the northwest Bruneian waterways. Equipped with surface-to-surface missiles, the KDB Waspada, constructed in Singapore, was added to the fleet in 1978. Additionally, the flotilla located in Muara served well in counter-infiltration strategies against smaller warships.[7]

Post-Independence

[edit]
KDB Waspada docked at Muara Naval Base in 1985

Before being taken out of service in 1980, the Bendahara-class parol boats saw service for more than fourteen years.[14] The RBMR was renamed as the Royal Brunei Armed Forces (RBAF), or Angkatan Bersenjata Diraja Brunei, on 1 January 1984, as part of an attempt to reform the armed forces following independence. Since 1984, the flotilla also maintained its routine maritime training exercises with the Royal Malaysian Navy, the Republic of Singapore Navy, and the Royal Thai Navy.[15] As Brunei's military forces grew, the First Flotilla was renamed again on 1 October 1991, becoming the Royal Brunei Navy (RBN). The RBAF was reorganised in 1991 as a result of Bruneian government's emphasis on the exclusive economic zone (EEZ), which is recognized by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea governing maritime regulations and is enforced by numerous nations due to the growing significance of the maritime boundary issue.[7]

The Royal Brunei Navy aimed to undergo a large-scale modernisation, with the upgrading of the Muara Naval Base, and the purchase of three British-built corvettes from BAE Systems Naval Ships, Scotland. The ships were armed with MBDA Exocet Block II anti-ship missiles and MBDA Seawolf surface-to-air missiles. The contract was awarded to GEC-Marconi in 1995: the Nakhoda Ragam-class corvette were launched in January 2001, June 2001, and June 2002, at the then BAE Systems Marine yard at Scotstoun. These were completed but not delivered from BAE Systems Naval Ships in Scotstoun due to claims by the RBN that the ships fail to meet the required specifications;[16] though opinion in the shipyard was that they were too complex for a small navy to operate.[17] The contract dispute became the subject of arbitration.[18] When the dispute was settled in favour of BAE Systems, the vessels were handed over to Royal Brunei Technical Services (RBTS) in June 2007.[17]

Darussalam-class corvettes at Barrow-in-Furness in 2007

In 2007, Brunei contracted the German Lürssen shipyard to find a new customer for the three ships, though by 2011 the vessels remained unsold and laid up at Barrow-in-Furness.[19] These ships were eventually purchased in 2013 by the Indonesian Navy for £380 million, or half of the original unit cost, and renamed Bung Tomo-class corvette.[20] KDB Darussalam and KDB Darulehsan are two new Darussalam-class offshore patrol vessel (OPVs)[21] that Brunei purchased for the RBN at the beginning of 2011. Launched on 6 January 2011, KDB Darulaman, the third Darussalam-class OPV, was the first to be put into the water for its acceptance testing in the harbour and at sea before to its August 2011 delivery date.[15]

Exercise SEAGULL 03-07 was held in Brunei from 2 to 10 September 2007, between the RBN and their Philippine Navy (PN) counterparts. Participating ships include the PN corvette BRP Rizal (PS-74) and patrol gunboat BRP Federico Martir (PG-385), and RBN ships KDB Pejuang, KDB Seteria, KDB Perwira, and KDB Penyerang. They conducted series of drills, including mine clearance, under-water operations, replenishment at sea, night encounter exercise, boarding exercise, and other naval tactical exercises.[22] The four 41 metres (135 ft) Ijtihad-class patrol boats (KDB Ijtihad, KDB Berkat, KDB Syafaat, and KDB Afiat)[23] that had already been put into service with the RBN were also further commissioned. Two of these patrol boats were put into service in March 2010, and the other two by August of the same year. The Waspada-class fast attack craft and Perwira-class patrol boat, which had served the Sultanate for forty years, were scheduled to be replaced by these modern platforms.[15]

Present day

[edit]
KDB Darulaman underway during CARAT Brunei in 2018

On 28 November 2011, the RBN celebrated the commissioning of a new Fast Interceptor Boat (FIB 25-012) known as KDB Mustaed.[24] During the Exercise RIMPAC 2014 naval exercise, which was hosted by the United States Navy, the RBN's Darussalam-class OPVs, KDB Darussalam and KDB Darulaman, fired their MBDA Exocet MM40 Block II anti-ship missiles for the first time in the Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF), which is located 80 nautical miles (150 km; 92 mi) north of Kauai.[25] The Perwira-class patrol boats were all officially decommissioned in 2016–2017.[26] In 2019, the RBN unveiled the Singapore-based Force-21 manufactured Digital Disruptive Pattern (D2P) battle-dress uniform in digital blue colours at the 58th anniversary celebration at the Bolkiah Garrison.[27][28]

In April 2021, the RBN installed the Royal Brunei Navy Full Mission Bridge Simulator (RBN FMBS) to provide synthetic training for all sailors of the RBN.[29] The RBN received the two former Swift-class patrol craft vessels,[30] RSS Brave, which was retired on 27 August 2019, and RSS Gallant, which was decommissioned on 11 December 2020, as a gift in March 2023 after they had been renovated. They are currently referred to as KDB Al-Faruq and KDB As-Siddiq in RBN service, which means "truthful."[31] They are 55 metres (180 feet) long, weighing 500 tonnes (551 short tons; 492 long tons).[32]

Roles and organisation

[edit]
A member of the Naval Surface Action Group during National Day 2023

Roles

[edit]

The roles of the RBN are:

Organisation

[edit]

The RBN is divided into four main components as follows:[33]

  • Fleet
  • Administration
  • Training
  • Logistics

Headquarters

[edit]

The administration of First Sea Battalion moved to a new base at Jalan Tanjong Pelumpong Muara in 1974. This base is now known as the Muara Naval Base. The Muara Naval Base serves as the headquarters of the RBN. It was expanded in 1997 to include facilities to support three offshore support vessels.[34] Muara Naval Base is frequently visited by foreign warships, most notable are the frequent visits by British Royal Navy ships. Persekutuan Pengakap Negara Brunei Darussalam visits the naval base sometimes too.

Commander

[edit]
Commander, Royal Brunei Navy
no. portrait service number, rank,
name
(birth – death)
term of appointment ref.
took office left office time in office
1 Major General
Pengiran Ibnu Basit
(20 Jan 1942 – ???)
1965 1966 1 year [35]
2 Colonel
Kefli Razali
(6 Oct 1940 – ???)
22 Apr 1983 30 Sep 1986 3 years, 161 days [36]
3 Lieutenant Colonel
Noeh Abdul Hamid
(??? – 6 Aug 1988)
30 Sep 1986 30 Dec 1988 2 years, 91 days [37]
4 Lieutenant Colonel
Shahri Mohammad Ali
(??? – ???)
30 Dec 1988 1 Nov 1991 2 years, 306 days [38]
5 Lieutenant Colonel
Abdul Latif Damit
(25 Dec 1950 – ???)
1 Nov 1991 25 Jun 1993 1 year, 236 days [39]
(2) Colonel
Kefli Razali
(6 Oct 1940 – ???)
25 Jun 1993 3 Feb 1995 1 year, 223 days [36]
6 Colonel
Abdul Jalil Ahmad
(??? – ???)
5 Feb 1995 13 Jun 2002 7 years, 128 days [40]
7 123 Colonel
Joharie Matussin
(??? – ???)
13 Jun 2002 16 May 2008 5 years, 338 days [41]
8 First Admiral
Abdul Halim
(24 Jan 1965 – ???)
16 May 2008 28 Feb 2014 5 years, 288 days [41][42]
9 First Admiral
Abdul Aziz
(23 Sep 1966 – ???)
28 Feb 2014 13 Mar 2015 1 year, 13 days [43]
10 First Admiral
Pengiran Norazmi
(??? – ???)
13 Mar 2015 19 Apr 2019 4 years, 37 days [44]
11 342 First Admiral
Othman Suhaili
(19 Apr 1970 – ???)
19 Apr 2019 31 Dec 2020 1 year, 256 days [45][46]
12 First Admiral
Spry Serudi
(25 Mar 1970 – ???)
31 Dec 2020 30 Dec 2022 1 year, 364 days [47][48]
13 Captain
Mohamad Sarif Pudin
(26 Dec 1972 – ???)
acting
30 Dec 2022 incumbent 1 year, 326 days [3]

Rank structure

[edit]

Commissioned officer

[edit]

The rank insignia of commissioned officers.

Rank group General / flag officers Senior officers Junior officers
 Royal Brunei Navy[49]
Laksamana armada Laksamana Laksamana madya Laksamana muda Laksamana pertama Kepten Komander Leftenan komander Leftenan Leftenan madya Leftenan muda

Enlisted

[edit]

The rank insignia of non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.

Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted
 Royal Brunei Navy[49]

No insignia
Pegawai waran 1 Pegawai waran 2 Bintara kanan Bintara Laskar kanan Laskar muda Prebet/Soldadu

Equipment

[edit]

The current fleet of the Royal Brunei Navy is as follows:[50][51]

class
or
name
image builder type year
entered
service
details ship name,
pennant
no.
offshore patrol boat
Darussalam class[21] Lürssen Werft, Bremen-Vegesack,  Germany offshore
patrol
vessel
2011-2014 80 metres (262 ft) OPV ordered from Lürssen Werft.

Armament:

Darussalam (06)
Darulehsan (07)
Darulaman (08)
Daruttaqwa (09)
Inshore patrol boat
Ijtihad class[23]
Lürssen Werft, Bremen-Vegesack,  Germany patrol boat 2010 41 metres (135 ft) PV ordered from Lürssen Werft.

Armament:

Itjihad (17)
Berkat (18)
Syafaat (19)
Afiat (20)
Fearless class
ST Engineering,  Singapore patrol vessel 2023 Formerly commissioned into the Singapore Navy, later gifted to Brunei in March 2023.[52][53]

Armament:

As-Siddiq (95)
Al-Faruq (96)
fast attack craft
Mustaed class[24] Marinteknik Shipyard Tuas,  Singapore fast
attack
craft
2011 27 metres (89 ft) FAC based on Lürssen Werft FIB25-012 design. Built in Singapore.

Armament:

Mustaed (21)
Waspada class[54] Vosper Thornycroft,  Singapore fast
attack
craft
1978–1979 37 metres (121 ft) FAC ordered from Vosper Thornycroft. Total of 3 ships. Decommissioned April 2011. 1 in Brunei service and 2 donated to Indonesia as KRI Salawaku (642) and KRI Badau (643).

Armament:

Waspada (P02)
landing craft
Serasa class Transfield Shipbuilding, Henderson,  Australia amphibious
warfare
craft

(LCM)
1996 Armament: Serasa (L33)
Teraban (L34)
Damuan class Cheverton Workboats, Cowes,  England landing
craft
utility
1976-1977 unarmed, carries 30 tons of cargo Puni (L32)
support vessel
Cheverton Boatworks, Cowes,  England support
launch
1982 used as tug and dive tender Burong Nuri

Others

[edit]

Personnel launches used for riverine patrols

  • Aman (01)
  • Damai (02)
  • Sentosa (04)
  • Sejahteru (06)

Fisheries and Industry / Primary Resources ministries also operate 16 metres (52 ft) patrol boats built by Syarikat Cheoy Lee Shipyards (delivered 2002).

Joint exercises and training

[edit]

The Royal Brunei Navy and the Republic of Singapore Navy co-operate with each other through an annual joint exercise, code-named Exercise Pelican. Officers and sailors of the Royal Brunei Navy are also sent overseas for advanced training, generally to Australia, Brazil, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore, United Kingdom, and United States of America.[55]

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Acting Deputy Commander of Royal Brunei Navy". Navy.MinDef.gov.bn. Royal Brunei Navy Headquarters, Muara Naval Base: Defence Information Technology Unit, Ministry of Defence, Brunei Darussalam. n.d. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  2. ^ "Fleet Commander, Royal Brunei Navy". Navy.MinDef.gov.bn. Royal Brunei Navy Headquarters, Muara Naval Base: Defence Information Technology Unit, Ministry of Defence, Brunei Darussalam. n.d. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  3. ^ a b c "Commander – Acting Commander of Royal Brunei Navy". Navy.MinDef.gov.bn. Royal Brunei Navy Headquarters, Muara Naval Base: Defence Information Technology Unit, Ministry of Defence, Brunei Darussalam. n.d. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  4. ^ "Chief of Staff, Royal Brunei Navy". Navy.MinDef.gov.bn. Royal Brunei Navy Headquarters, Muara Naval Base: Defence Information Technology Unit, Ministry of Defence, Brunei Darussalam. n.d. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  5. ^ a b "Royal Brunei Navy – Introduction". MinDef.gov.bn. Royal Brunei Navy Headquarters, Muara Naval Base: Defence Information Technology Unit, Ministry of Defence, Brunei Darussalam. Archived from the original on 4 August 2007. Retrieved 19 April 2007.
  6. ^ "ROYAL BRUNEI NAVY CELEBRATES ITS 58TH ANNIVERSARY". www.mindef.gov.bn. 14 June 2023. Retrieved 12 June 2024.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Bachamiya A Hussainmiya (1 January 2012). "Royal Brunei Arrmed Forces 50th anniversary Commemorative History". RBAF 50th Golden Anniversary Commemorative Book. Southeastern University of Sri Lanka: 13–24.
  8. ^ a b c "Royal Brunei Navy – history". MinDef.gov.bn. Royal Brunei Navy Headquarters, Muara Naval Base: Defence Information Technology Unit, Ministry of Defence, Brunei Darussalam. Retrieved 19 April 2007.
  9. ^ a b c "Royal Brunei Navy – history, page 2". MinDef.gov.bn. Royal Brunei Navy Headquarters, Muara Naval Base: Defence Information Technology Unit, Ministry of Defence, Brunei Darussalam. Retrieved 19 April 2007.
  10. ^ CDR PG MOHD FAREN. "In the wake of the Navy WESTLAND SR.N5 HOVERCRAFT: A LEGACY NOT SOON FORGOTTEN" (PDF). navy.mindef.gov.bn. p. 21. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
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  19. ^ "How Lurssen wooed Brunei". Ocnus.net.
  20. ^ Santosa, Novan Iman (23 October 2020). "Used 'alutsista': Warships that safeguard Indonesian waters". TheJakartaPost.com. The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
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  34. ^ "GHD Annual Review 2002 / 2003" (PDF). GHD.com.au. GHD Pty Ltd. p. 15. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 August 2008.
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  54. ^ "Indonesia to get Brunei patrol ships". BT.com.bn. The Brunei Times. 26 February 2011. Archived from the original on 4 March 2011.
  55. ^ "Royal Brunei Navy – training". MinDef.gov.bn. Royal Brunei Navy Headquarters, Muara Naval Base: Defence Information Technology Unit, Ministry of Defence, Brunei Darussalam. Retrieved 19 April 2007.

Further reading

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