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Singapore's P-8A Poseidon aircraft purchase is anything but routine

The Straits Times

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September 18, 2025

At a time of submarine proliferation and great-power rivalry, Singapore's purchase of the P-8A sends a message about deterrence, defence and alignment with key partners.

- Mike Yeo

When Singapore announced this week that it would acquire four Boeing P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft, defence watchers were hardly surprised.

The Republic of Singapore Air Force's nine Fokker-50s have been flying since 1993, and their replacement was long overdue.

The Singapore Armed Forces also had plenty of opportunities to see the plane up close in action in bilateral exercises with the US Navy's P-8A here and its hosting of regular deployments of the US and Australian P-8As at Paya Lebar Air Base since 2015.

What makes the deal significant, however, is its timing and its message. Asia is in the midst of a submarine arms race, maritime threats are multiplying, and the balance of power in Asia is shifting. Beyond being a natural next step in force modernisation, the acquisition carries deterrence value and geopolitical weight.

A MAJOR LEAP IN CAPABILITIES

Undoubtedly, buying what defence wonks call "the submarine hunter" represents a substantial upgrade in Singapore's maritime surveillance. Beyond simply flying higher and seeing farther than the Fokker-50, the P-8A is designed for the most complex of missions: finding, tracking and, if necessary, neutralising submarines.

That role has grown urgent as more Southeast Asian militaries, including Singapore itself, add submarines to their fleets, raising the risks of accidents in crowded waters. Indonesia's KRI Nanggala tragedy in 2021, which claimed the 53 lives on board, underscored the dangers to submarine operations and the need for rapid search-and-locate capability.

Crucially, the P-8A is not just an "eye in the sky" but a "gun at sea", extending the SAF's reach from reconnaissance into full-spectrum antisubmarine and anti-ship operations.

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