INTEL: Indonesian Naval Modernization Strategy Reflects Regional Power Competition Indonesia's integration of advanced systems—drones and MLRS platforms—into anti-access/anti-denial (A2/AD) exercises demonstrates a shift toward asymmetric maritime defense capabilities. Historically, Southeast Asian navies relied on conventional surface warfare; the TNI-AL's current doctrine mirrors strategies adopted by Vietnam and China over the past decade, prioritizing area denial over fleet-on-fleet engagement. This evolution matters because Indonesia controls critical chokepoints (Sunda/Malacca Straits) and faces growing pressure from both Chinese expansion and Western naval presence—requiring credible layered defenses rather than capital-intensive traditional warships. The Bangka exercises signal Jakarta is prioritizing force multiplication through technological sophistication rather than numerical superiority, a pragmatic approach given defense budget constraints (approximately 1.2% of GDP) versus regional competitors.