Posted on 01/06/2004 9:05:14 AM PST by Jeff Head
By Jeff Head, January 2004 In the 1990's the Poeple's Republic of China embarked on an unprecedented military buildup to modernize their aremd forces, increase their qualitative functioning and put them in a position to be able to better carry out the geo-olitical dictates of the Red Chinese government. This necessarily includes being able to develop themselves to a point that they could credibly confront the other armed forces in the region who may stand in the way of those geo-political directives, in particularly the United States. The buildup has covered the spectrum of military forces, from strategic rocket forces (ICBM's), tactical rocket forces (SRBM's), ground forces, air forces and naval forces. It is being accomplished with monies that would otherwise have bankrupted the earlier marxist and maoist market economies, and while maintianing their communistic/marxistis political heiarchy. Capitalizing on the low cost labor force that they have opened up to the western world, the Red Chinese are obtaining the influx of capital necessary to maintian their military buildup. Thye are also making adept application of Sun Tsu philosophy (where makes clear that all warfare is deception) to amass staggering western trade defficits (meaning the west is on the deficit end) which are reaping them the tremendous capital and technological capabilities to continue and to achieve their military goals. In conjucntion with the capital gains, through research and development, blackmail, importation of dual use technologies, bribery and out and out espionage, the Red Chinese have also markedly increased their technological and qualitative capabilities many fold over the last several years. This has allowed them to rise from a point in the early to mid 1990's where they were 25-30 years behind US technology, to a point today (less than fifteen years later) where their newer systems are challenging American capabilities in some areas, and posing a credible threat in others. While not an exhaustive study, the focus of this article is to examine and present the recent developments in the Chinese Navy (PLAN) which are putting them into a position to credibly challenge the United States Navy in the region. The Chinese Navy has historically been without any sea-based naval air component. Like the Soviets before them, they have historically relied heavily on land based naval strike aircraft to attack and defeat opposing at-sea naval forces in the region. They have had no aircraft carriers. However, like the Soviets before them, the Chinese have come to see the desirability and necessity of developing sea-based naval air forces if they plan to project power very far from their own shores. In recognition of this, over the last ten years, they have purchased and studied at least three different carrier designs. These ships have been acquired through various strategmns including purchasing them for scrap and then bringing them to Chinese naval yards for study and purchasing them for supposed economic reasons, like making a floating casino out of a former Russian carrier, and then again bringing them to China for study. The two carriers bought for scrap are not suitable for refitting and making operational, but they would have provided Chinese shipbuilders and designers with invaluable knowledge so they can augment their own future naval plans. The latest carrier obtained in this fashiopn is the most troubling. It is the Russian carrier, the Varyag. The Varyag is.a relatively modern design and could be made into something that is very capable. It was towed to the Dalian Chinese naval yards where it is currently being studied for anything but a floating Casino. Given the Chinese capital capabilities, it could easily be refitted and made sea worthy (it was towed at sea from the Black Sea to China) or it could provide the technical basis for a wholly indigenous Chinese carrier.
The Vayrag Entering Chinese waters The Vayrag birtrhed at Chinese naval shipyards The Vayrag is not something to be taken lightly. Fully equiped it would approach a 65,000 ton displacement and embark 40-50 modern jet fighter and attack aircraft. As such, it would be the equal (it is in fact a newer design) to the Russian Kuznetzov and would be the largest carrier in the world outside of America's super-carriers. Operating within range of ground air support and with the appropriate escort vessels, it would pose a credable threat in the China Sea and particularly in the Formosa Straits. The Chinese have been purchasing, and are now license building, SU-27 fighter bombers in China which could be used on the Vayrag and their new J-10 aircraft might also be suitably modified for carrier operations. If the Chinese were to complete this carrier and then augment it with designs of their own to the point where they were producing several of them, the balance of power in the region would shift dramitically.
Red Chinese produced SU-27 Aircraft (J11) The Red Chinese J-10 But do the Chinese intend to do this? That question can be answered by determining if the Chinese are developing and fielding the necessary escort and support vessels and infrastructure to protect and augment any carrier they develop. The answer to that questions is an umittigated, yes! The Chinese have embarked on an ambitious and unprecedented development and ship building program of modern destroyers and frigates that would allow for the creation of powerful carrier battle groups similar to those fielded by the U.S. Navy once they produce a carrier. These include multi-role combat vessels, area air-defense vessels (similar to American Aegis vessels) and support vessels. They have also purchased very capable, modern large surface combatants from the Russians. The Sovermenny class destroyers were produced by the Soviets in the late 1980's to specifcally threaten U.S. carriers. The Chinese have purchased four of these vessels and refitted and renamed them the Hangzhou class. The Russians modernized the design throughout the 1990's before their sale to the Chinese and they are an example of the type of equipment the Chinese are purchasing with their new found wealth and technology (mostly ammassed from trade with the United States and other western countries). These ships are very capable, mulit-purpose guided missile destroyer and carry the Sunburn and Yahkont surface to surface missiles which were specifically designed by the Russians to attack U.S. super-carriers and defeat the Aegis air defense system. These vessels aslo have a credible medium-ranged anti-air defense system suitable for their own protection, or close in protection of other vessels.
A former Sovremmenny class now saling as the PLAN Hangzhou To augment the multi-role capabilities of the Hangzhou class, the Chinese have done a very thorough job of development themselves, producing their own modern designs. This started in the 1990's with modernization of the numerous, but older, Luda class of destroyers. It then proceeded to the development of the newer Luhu class desroyers in the mid-1990's and the evolution of that class into the newer and more capable Luhai class by the late 1990's. It is now finally producing their new Typer 52B, Guangzhou class of vessels. With a displacemnt approaching 7,000+ tons and modern anti-surface, anti-air and anti-submarine weapons systems and using proven Russian Top Dome and other acquisition and targeting sensors, this design represents a modern Chinese version of the Russian Svremmenny and indicates the Chinese commitment to being self-sufficient in their naval development and power projection capabilities. This design is a very capable design and cannot be taken lightly by U.S. war planners. Currently the Chinese have launched two of these newer vessels and are projected to build up to eight of them.
The new PLAN 168 Guanghou destroyer The second Guanghou destroyer being built In addition, the Chinese are developing a new, stealthy Type 054 class frigate that will be capable in the anti-air, anti-surface and anti-submarine roles. Similar to the role of the earlier U.S. Perry class frigates, but much newer, more stealthy and an apparent attempt to beat the Americans to the Litoral Combat Ship role, these new frigates are already being built and launched in Chinese shipyards.
The new Type 54 PLAN Frigate In order to provide the area air coverage necessary to protect a carrier in the modern war-at-sea environment, the Chinese have also embarked on the very ambitious task of developing, building, and launching modern area air-defense destroyers. These ships are similar in design and function to the American AEGIS Burke destroyers and are used to protect large task forces, particularly carrier battle groups from mass air assault by aircraft or missiles. Captializing on joint exercises and partnership programs with the United States Navy in the 1990's. where Red Chinese officers were actually allowed onboard American Aegis ships to observe their operations, and relying on technology that has been pilfered through dual technology methods, espionage and the rising capabilities of Chinese researchers themselves (who are now very well funded), the Chinese are now building a new class of destroyers, the Type 52C, Lanzhou guided missile destroyers. These vessels will employ Phased Array radar acquisition and targeting systems similar to Aegis and their own long-range, vertical launch missiles. These vessels are meant to be the equivalent of the U.S. Navy's Arleigh Burk class destroyers. Two are currently being built simultaneously and it is expected that the Chinese will build at least two more, while developing an even larger and more capable class of vessels which may be intended to rival the vaunted American Ticonderoga class Aegis cruisers.
Two new Type 52C, Lanzhou AEGIS like destroyers under construction READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE BY CLICKING HERE
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Given the topic of discussion in your post, the last word is unintentionally funny.
Heck, the Serbs had a way around our stealth technology. The way regular radar works is by emitting radio waves, and seeing if any are reflected back by a flying object. The way stealth works is by having the plane absorb most of the radar waves, and reflecting the rest in directions other than back to the radar receiver.
The problem with stealth is that you are not truly invisible, just "radar black". If you get BETWEEN a radio transmitter and a sophisticated receiver, you cast a shadow (this is why the US spent some time at the beginning of Iraq II to take out cell towers and other microwave radio sources). To determine where you are, the other side needs to have sophisticated electronics and good computers that can handle signal processing tasks. The Chinese are investing heavily in electronics technology.
If we belatedly discover the Chinese have developed a good way to put any stealth aircraft between a bright microwave source and sophisticated receivers, then we will have a problem.
I don't think this means anything as far as China is concerned. China has lots of cash. China is a major exporter of increasingly high-tech consumer and commercial goods. China and the former USSR cannot be compared.
Hope the boatworks are making new attack subs.. in that case the Chinese navy are mere targets...
Excessively simple solution: lob an AGM-88 at the microwave source.
There's good news there. The Virginia class is under construction. The Virginia was christined in August of last year and will be commissioned in July of this year. The 2nd boat, the Texas, is slated for 2005 and the 3rd, the Hawaii, for 2006.
At that point we will be producing two of them per year. We plan to build thirty of them and they will replace the older LA class boats as they are decomissioned until we are left with the Seawolfs and the Virginias.
Here's a pic ot the Virginia prior to christening:
In addition, in terminal dive mode from long range, the Phoenix is not very manueverable. Great at taking out Tu-22M's or TU-16's, but not as effective against more modern fighters, especially once they are aware of them.
We need the LRAAM.
I am very familiar with the Rolling Airframe missile (RAM) system and know of its capabilities. It is not at all fool proof or 100% effective against the Sunburn or the Yahkont. Yes, it can take them down...but it will not get all of them. But, as I have said in the past...the missile threat plays to our strength...it is what we designed AEGIOS and all of the weapons systems being intergrated into it for, even though the Chinese and others continue to put efforts there to try and find vulnerability.
Aa to the rest, I agree with most of your other points. I understand that production would pick up, but much of our capability to shift peace time production over to war time production is being moved to the PRC as we speek. We'd have to build a lot of new plants from scratch. I have no doubt we would do this and that we would win in dramatic fashion...but building takes time and in war, time costs lives and ground.
The whole point of this thread is simply to document the efforts the PLAN is making in this regard...and they are not minimal or insubstantial. We need to keep our guard up and, IMHO, adopt economic policies with the PRC that does not tend to be what funds their buildup and efforts in this regard. but that's just my opinion.
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