Posted on 04/02/2017 8:16:51 PM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
Five years ago, India had two aircraft carriers and China had none. Now, perhaps as early as this month, the Peoples Liberation Army (Navy), or PLA(N), will match India in carrier numbers.
With INS Viraat decommissioned last month, the Indian Navy has just a single carrier, the Russian-built INS Vikramaditya. The PLA(N) too operates a single carrier, the Liaoning, bought from Russia and refurbished in Dalian, China.
However, at an alarming speed, another Chinese carrier is coming on stream. Naval analysts believe that, on April 23 the PLA(N)s 68th anniversary its second carrier will be officially launched.
Chinas English language media, including Peoples Daily, quoted Chinas defence ministry spokesperson Wu Qian as stating on Thursday that a date for the launch would be soon announced, which wont keep the public waiting for too long.
The new carrier is being named Shandong. While the Liaoning is termed a Type 001 carrier, the Shandong will be categorised Type 001A.
After the Shandongs launch, says Chinas defence ministry, it would still have to undergo one-two years of outfitting (of weapons, radars, instruments, etc) and another year of sea trials before joining the PLA(N)s operational fleet in 2020.
Meanwhile, Indias second carrier, INS Vikrant, being fabricated at Cochin Shipyard Ltd (CSL), has fallen eight years behind schedule. Originally to be delivered in 2015, it is now expected to be fully operational only in 2023, years after Chinas second carrier joins the PLA(N) fleet. Worryingly, the Indian Navy plans to commission a partly operational Vikrant by end-2018, without its aviation complex (flight operations control) or LR-SAM anti-ship missiles. That means for some time, maybe years, the Vikrant would lack both strike and defensive capability.
Further, a Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) report revealed last year that the MiG-29 fighter was riddled with problems and that serviceability rates were just 15-35 per cent.
While the Vikrant would have taken 14 years to build from the time its keel was laid in 2009, the Shandong would have taken barely half that time, assuming construction commenced soon after 2012, when the Liaoning finally vacated her berth at the Dalian shipyard. India, however, does enjoy superiority in its existing carrier. INS Vikramaditya, a 40,000-tonne carrier that embarks 36 aircraft, including 26 MiG-29 fighters, is a battle-ready platform. The Liaoning, displacing 55,000-60,000 tonnes, is termed by Beijing as a training and research vessel and is not yet assigned to a PLA(N) operational fleet. Even so, it carries a full compliment of 36 fixed wing and rotary wing aircraft, including 24 Shenyang J-15 (modelled on the Sukhoi-33) fighters; and ten helicopters, including the Changshe Z-18, Kamov-31 and Harbin Z-9. Last November, her political commissar declared the Liaoning was combat ready.
The experience of renovating and operating the Liaoning is evident in Shandongs design. Displacing 65,000 tonnes, it features a ski-jump launch system similar to the Liaoning (as do the Vikramaditya and Vikrant). However, Chinas defence ministry says it will have more cargo room, more sophisticated radar, more advanced weapons systems and more reliable engines than the Liaoning.
Like India, China plans to build future carriers with a catapult launch system rather than a ski-jump, which restricts the payload aircraft can take off with. Since they carry less weapons and fuel, fighters operating off a ski-jump carrier have shorter flight ranges and lesser punch.
The PLA(N) carrier that follows Shandong, called the Type 002, would overcome these drawbacks with a catapult launch system. A catapult accelerates aircraft to a higher take-off speed, allowing greater payload and faster launches. It is not clear when the Type 002 would be built, or if it would be nuclear powered.
Indias third carrier, INS Vishal, however, is being planned as a technologically cutting-edge warship with American design features. Like the Type 002, it will have a catapult launch system that equips all US Navy carriers. As Business Standard reported (November 7, 2016 Navys second home-built carrier will be nuclear but will come only in 2030s) Vishal will feature nuclear propulsion, an electromagnetic aircraft launch system (EMALS) and the capacity to embark at least 55 aircraft. It will be built in India and will join the fleet by 2030-35. Chinese naval strategists say the PLA(N) will eventually operate five -six carriers, with two deployed at all times in the Western Pacific and two in the Indian Ocean. Indian naval planners plan on three carriers one each based in the eastern and western coasts with a third in reserve for maintenance and repairs.
I like it. What are we going to do if they build 24 more?
I think our own Marines could use something like that.
Here’s the Imperial March to accompany that pic => https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QzntZLHcYy0
Maybe the U.S. could build a carrier India would buy. Made in America! More jobs! More exports! More winning! Go Trump!
when I see these big carriers, USA based or not, I can’t help but think of the Repulse and the Prince of Wales, which were the first capital ships sunk by air attack on open seas.
the British commander apparently did not believe that modern battleships could be sunk by air attack alone.
Do carriers have a similar vulnerability to some new weapon or tactic? They represent a huge investment in a single ship. The same money could pay for many small ships.
Is there any way to decentralize the aircraft carrier function to many small ships?
I’m not a military expert, just asking the question.
When the “Varyag” was purchased from the Ukrainians I thought the Chicoms were going to make it into a hotel/casino? What happened? Rhetorical question of course.
It’s my understanding that the ships themselves are quite sinkable and are one in a group of ships who protect it, along with aircraft and other assorted weaponry.
I don’t know how they protect against torpedoes.
Carriers are sitting ducks and rather expensive ducks at that
(chuckling)
Fleet air defense is the #1 priority for the USN. That has been neglected somewhat since the retirement of the F-14A/D and the AIM-54 Phoenix Missile a few years before that. If a battle group could be build around a small flight deck (say LHA/LHD class vessel) you could conceivably use unmanned drones. But there would have to be artificial intelligence to handle the engagements. Things would happen too fast to be using a data-link.
I seem to remember a discussion centered around what makes our carriers almost invincible - the US let it be known that the sinking of a carrier will be given a nuclear response.
Paid for with the money from these stupid free trade deals, which have created Chinese tax payers to pay into their military at the expense of American tax payers who could have paid into our military. Thanks free traitors.
Yet another way that all that cheap Chinese crap sold at Walmart and other places hurts us.
Any navy with a half-decent submarine force could take out a carrier. Carriers are only really good for taking on half-arsed mickey mouse navies that don’t have proper subs and for providing air support for invasions of countries that lack a formidable land-based air force.
Wouldn’t a carrier have an attack sub in its group to detect and eliminate enemy subs? This would be in addition to the ASW capabilities of its other escorts.
There is almost no protection truth be known. Let alone a barrage of high Mach supersonic missiles.
Trump and the USN/ defense complex have real issues that 20 years of neglect have not solved.
India loses edge? Doesn’t that depend on who has the best planes and pilots? Serious question all.
“Carriers are sitting ducks and rather expensive ducks at that”
I seem to remember a discussion centered around what makes our carriers almost invincible - the US let it be known that the sinking of a carrier will be given a nuclear response....”
So they really are sitting ducks
Good to know we have, what, 22 of them?
Good Grief.
Maybe China is building them for the little countries that have an issue with their new island.
In this day and age Carriers are LSTs. Large slow targets.
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