India has got another partner in its War against Pirates at Gulf of Aden of Somalia.  After China and Japan, it is South Korea which would join the joint mission against Pirates.
“South Korea has indicated its interest in join the tri-nation effort that was launched in February this year,” a senior Indian Navy officer said at New Delhi.
“The proposal from Seoul is likely to be approved by the three nations and the Korean warships may join the coordinated patrol from July,” he said.
India, Japan and China agreed on the mechanism for optimum utilisation of their warships’ patrolling of the Internationally Recommended Transit Corridor (IRTC) so that the movement of cargo vessels in convoys could be coordinated to ward off pirate attacks.
Till February, the three nations were operating independently in Gulf of Aden to provide safe passage to merchant ships. The trilateral agreement was arrived at after a meeting of the Shared Awareness and De-confliction (SHADE) initiative held earlier this year. South Korea too was operating independently in the pirate-infested waters.