Posted on 01/14/2016 5:38:39 AM PST by sukhoi-30mki
China has finished construction on a second 10,000-ton China Coast Guard (CCG) cutter destined for patrols in the South China Sea, Chinese state media reports. The ship, designated CCG 3901, âhas been completed recently and is ready to start protecting Chinaâs maritime rights,â The Global Times announced. A sister ship, the CCG2901, already deployed to the East China Sea in 2015.
The CCG 3901, constructed at Shanghaiâs Jiangnan Shipyard, has been dubbed the âmonsterâ by the media due to its unusual large size for a coast guard vessel. According to some sources, the vessel could have a displacement 12,000 to 15,000 metric tons once all systems have been installed aboard. In comparison, the China Coast Guard ship outsizes a the U.S. Navyâs Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruiser by about 50 percent, and is also bigger than an Arleigh-Burke-class guided missile destroyer (e.g., the USS Lassen), which displaces around 9,700 tons. In addition, it also outclasses Japanâs 6,500-ton Shikishima-class coast guard cutters.
According to Chinese state media, the coast guard vessel can reach a top speed of up to 25 knots and is equipped with 76 millimeter rapid fire guns, two secondary guns and two anti-aircraft guns. It also has a helicopter platform and hangar in the stern large enough to accommodate larger rotary wing aircraft. With the exception of the CCG 3901s sister ship, all other China Coast Guard vessels have so far been only lightly armed or are equipped with water cannons.
Unlike actual surface naval combat, in hostile encounters between coast guards the size of the ship plays a large role, particularly in the South China Sea, which has seen numerous instances of âramming contestsâ with two vessels often engaging in games of chicken trying to scare the other vessel off. The CCG 3901 appears to be first and foremost a coercive instrument for such encounters and will help to advance Chinaâs territorial claims in the South China Sea.
The Pentagonâs Office of Naval Intelligence summarized in an unclassified assessment of Chinaâs maritime forces the ongoing expansion of Beijingâs white-hull patrol cutter fleet:
The current phase of the construction program, which began in 2012, will add over 30 large patrol ships and over 20 patrol combatants to the force by 2015. This will increase by 25 percent the overall CCG force level in a fleet that is also improving rapidly in quality. Most MLE ships are either unarmed or armed only with light deck weapons (12.7mm, 14.5mm, and 30mm guns) and generally use commercial radars and communications equipment. Several of the largest ships are equipped with helicopter landing and hangar facilities as well.
The report also notes that âChina prefers using its Coast Guard as the primary enforcer of its maritime claims.â All in all, the China Coast Guard currently consists of 205 vessels of all types.
It shows no armament.
China Coast Guard vessel 3901, with a 12,000 ton displacement, will carry 76 millimeter rapid fire guns, two auxiliary guns and two anti-aircraft machine guns
That’s a B.A.T. (Big-Ass Target)!
It looks like a building in one of the Chinese ghost towns.
Isn’t it amazing analysts keep saying our ships are to big and here the chicoms build this and all of a sudden it’s a monster ship. Guess our carriers are Godzilla!
Are you kidding? 0bama probably sent China congrats and the bottle of champaign to launch it.
If they didn’t hype it as a “monster ship,” no one would read the article.
Sounds like standard anti-pirate, coast guard armament. The size of the ship is related to sea worthiness in large seas and fuel capacity for sustained patrols.
10,000 tons? Peanuts.
USS GEORGE H.W. BUSH (CVN-77)
Good for force projection. About the size of a WW2 Baltimore Class cruiser. Wouldn’t have a chance against a Demoines class heavy cruiser. 20k tons and 9 automatic 8 inch guns. Yowzah!
Coast Guard, not Navy.
We don’t put Carriers in our Coast Guard either.
This is bigger than any of our Coast Guard Cutters, only our Ice Breakers have more displacement, but they need the mass.
Kind of looks like a smaller version of the old Hospital ships.
Uhhh....I don’t know just how well that Chinese barge would fare in a Pacific typhoon. From looking at it, anyway.
Y did Carter normalize relations with these people?
Of course the Chinese ship would have a chance if our cruiser could not fire back in a timely fashion given our current rules of engagement.
That water looks toxic.
Pity they’re all museums/scrapped now.
Still, this isn’t so much a ‘monster ship’ as much as a modern take on the armed merchant cruiser type.
If they wanted a monster, they’d first have to start at 100K tons and go up from there. But that’s what those ‘islands’ are for.
A monster ship? Well, let’s see here. We have the Titanic, it went down on it’s maiden voyage. There is also the Bismarck, it went down. I’m not trying to say this Chinese one will go down right away, but big ships are big targets, it will go down if there is a war.
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