Posted on 12/13/2013 2:57:59 AM PST by markomalley
A Chinese naval vessel tried to force a U.S. guided missile warship to stop in international waters recently, causing a tense military standoff in the latest case of Chinese maritime harassment, according to defense officials.
The guided missile cruiser USS Cowpens, which recently took part in disaster relief operations in the Philippines, was confronted by Chinese warships in the South China Sea near Beijings new aircraft carrier Liaoning, according to officials familiar with the incident.
On December 5th, while lawfully operating in international waters in the South China Sea, USS Cowpens and a PLA Navy vessel had an encounter that required maneuvering to avoid a collision, a Navy official said.
This incident underscores the need to ensure the highest standards of professional seamanship, including communications between vessels, to mitigate the risk of an unintended incident or mishap.
A State Department official said the U.S. government issued protests to China in both Washington and Beijing in both diplomatic and military channels.
The Cowpens was conducting surveillance of the Liaoning at the time. The carrier had recently sailed from the port of Qingdao on the northern Chinese coast into the South China Sea.
According to the officials, the run-in began after a Chinese navy vessel sent a hailing warning and ordered the Cowpens to stop. The cruiser continued on its course and refused the order because it was operating in international waters.
Then a Chinese tank landing ship sailed in front of the Cowpens and stopped, forcing the Cowpens to abruptly change course in what the officials said was a dangerous maneuver.
According to the officials, the Cowpens was conducting a routine operation done to exercise its freedom of navigation near the Chinese carrier when the incident occurred about a week ago.
The encounter was the type of incident that senior Pentagon officials recently warned could take place as a result of heightened tensions in the region over Chinas declaration of an air defense identification zone (ADIZ) in the East China Sea.
Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, recently called Chinas new air defense zone destabilizing and said it increased the risk of a military miscalculation.
Chinas military forces in recent days have dispatched Su-30 and J-11 fighter jets, as well as KJ-2000 airborne warning and control aircraft, to the zone to monitor the airspace that is used frequently by U.S. and Japanese military surveillance aircraft.
The United States has said it does not recognize Chinas ADIZ, as has Japans government.
Two U.S. B-52 bombers flew through the air zone last month but were not shadowed by Chinese interceptor jets.
Chinese naval and air forces also have been pressing Japan in the East China Sea over Tokyos purchase a year ago of several uninhabited Senkaku Islands located north of Taiwan and south of Okinawa.
China is claiming the islands, which it calls the Diaoyu. They are believed to contain large undersea reserves of natural gas and oil.
The Liaoning, Chinas first carrier that was refitted from an old Soviet carrier, and four warships recently conducted their first training maneuvers in the South China Sea. The carrier recently docked at the Chinese naval port of Hainan on the South China Sea.
Defense officials have said Chinas imposition of the ADIZ is aimed primarily at curbing surveillance flights in the zone, which Chinas military regards as a threat to its military secrets.
The U.S. military conducts surveillance flights with EP-3 aircraft and long-range RQ-4 Global Hawk drones.
In addition to the Liaoning, Chinese warships in the flotilla include two missile destroyers, the Shenyang and the Shijiazhuang, and two missile frigates, the Yantai and the Weifang.
Rick Fisher, a China military affairs expert, said it is likely that the Chinese deliberately staged the incident as part of a strategy of pressuring the United States.
They can afford to lose an LST [landing ship] as they have about 27 of them, but they are also usually armed with one or more twin 37 millimeter cannons, which at close range could heavily damage a lightly armored U.S. Navy destroyer, said Fisher, a senior fellow at the International Assessment and Strategy Center.
Most Chinese Navy large combat ships would be out-ranged by the 127-millimeter guns deployed on U.S. cruisers, except Chinas Russian-made Sovremenny-class ships and Beijings new Type 052D destroyers that are armed with 130-millimeter guns.
The encounter appears to be part of a pattern of Chinese political signaling that it will not accept the presence of American military power in its East Asian theater of influence, Fisher said.
China has spent the last 20 years building up its Navy and now feels that it can use it to obtain its political objectives, he said.
Fisher said that since early 2012 China has gone on the offensive in both the South China and East China Seas.
In this early stage of using its newly acquired naval power, China is posturing and bullying, but China is also looking for a fight, a battle that will cow the Americans, the Japanese, and the Filipinos, he said.
To maintain stability in the face of Chinese military assertiveness, Fisher said the United States and Japan should seek an armed peace in the region by heavily fortifying the Senkaku Islands and the rest of the island chain they are part of.
The U.S. and Japan should also step up their rearmament of the Philippines, Fisher said.
The Cowpens incident is the most recent example of Chinese naval aggressiveness toward U.S. ships.
The U.S. intelligence-gathering ship, USNS Impeccable, came under Chinese naval harassment from a China Maritime Surveillance ship, part of Beijings quasi-military maritime patrol craft, in June.
During that incident, the Chinese ship warned the Navy ship it was operating illegally despite sailing in international waters. The Chinese demanded that the ship first obtain permission before sailing in the area that was more than 100 miles from Chinas coast.
The U.S. military has been stepping up surveillance of Chinas naval forces, including the growing submarine fleet, as part of the U.S. policy of rebalancing forces to the Pacific.
The Impeccable was harassed in March 2009 by five Chinese ships that followed it and sprayed it with water hoses in an effort to thwart its operations.
A second spy ship, the USNS Victorious, also came under Chinese maritime harassment several years ago.
Adm. Samuel Locklear, when asked last summer about increased Chinese naval activities near Guam and Hawaii in retaliation for U.S. ship-based spying on China, said the dispute involves different interpretations of controlled waters.
Locklear said in a meeting with reporters in July, We believe the U.S. position is that those activities are less constrained than what the Chinese believe.
China is seeking to control large areas of international watersclaiming they are part of its United Nations-defined economic exclusion zonethat Locklear said cover most of the major sea lines of communication near China and are needed to remain free for trade and shipping.
Locklear, who is known for his conciliatory views toward the Chinese military, sought to play down recent disputes. When asked if the Chinese activities were troubling, he said: I would say its not provocative certainly. Id say that in the Asia-Pacific, in the areas that are closer to the Chinese homeland, that we have been able to conduct operations around each other in a very professional and increasingly professional manner.
The Pentagon and U.S. Pacific Command have sought to develop closer ties to the Chinese military as part of the Obama administrations Asia pivot policies.
However, Chinas military has shown limited interest in closer ties.
Chinas state-controlled news media regularly report that the United States is seeking to defeat China by encircling the country with enemies while promoting dissidents within who seek the ouster of the communist regime.
The Obama administration has denied it is seeking to contain China and has insisted it wants continued close economic and diplomatic relations.
President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to seek a new type of major power relationship during a summit in California earlier this year. However, the exact nature of the new relationship remains unclear.
America’s military budget has hit a ceiling.
I do not see any ceiling for China’s budget.
China keeps growing bigger. We need to bring back American industry now.
No one would have pulled this crap with Reagan. But with President Selfie, the country is now the world’s punching bag.
This kind of stuff happened all the time back in the early eighties in the Indian Ocean — except in those days we were harassed by Russian Krivak destroyers.
Like the Russians were then, the Chinese are just keeping up the tension, and probing our reactions. We couldn’t do much then but perform collision avoidance, and I’m thinking we can’t do much more — and likely even less — now.
ping
Excellent name since Walmart has drained from China the real outputs of labor and materials in exchange for... US Dollars!
There is no and cannot ever be a trade deficit. All trade is settled as a part of the trade. Hence the word “trade”. Stop being fooled by all this.
China is in break up mode. Their country is rapidly aging due to Socialist anti-family policies. The old guard is scared stupid over this. Their saber-rattling is proof of it.
What will China get from all this? A more powerfully armed and aggressive South Korea, Japan and perhaps the Phillipines. It will certainly drive more SE Asian countries into our sphere of influence including Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand.
The Chinese aren’t behaving with confidence, but fear. Their domestic situation is such that unless they create an outside enemy their political power will end. China isn’t a rising power, but a waning one.
You are sino-phobic ..like central_planning_va is. Your obsession should be focused on American liberalism, something you can impact. You can’t do a DAMNED THING about China .why don’t you grow up and admit it.
And I was not giving China “credit” as much as I was pointing out that in some ways .SOME WAYS .China’s business environment is freer than ours. This report came out in 2009. CNBC featured it, as did Rush, and some other sources. That’s not crediting China, that’s damning our own country.
Look moron, wanting to curb our own liberalism here at home means I am anti liberalism, not pro China. How is life with an IQ under 80? Really, I’d like to know.
On second thought, don’t tell me.
Speaking of Chickens-—we are now going to accept chicken imports from China.
Like we cannot raise enough American chickens to keep McDonalds supplied.
This is what happens when our president is a
feckless coward.
No America has gone nutso about making everything which used to be made in America, in a massive communist country.
I am not China-phobic.
America is walking in our national sleep, selling China the industry to bury us with.
Wake up. America needs to produce things, right here.
Now.
The tariffs are coming, the tariffs are coming....
It won't stave off our collapse, but still.
Notice none of the usual Free Traitors are actually critical of China. Instead they use this as an opportunity to instruct us how much free-er they are in China than the USA. Disgusting isn’t it?
Guns and barrel diameter, I suspect, are not the deciding factor. Some 5 inch projectiles are rocket propelled and can go much further than your typical 5 inch gun.
And the Standard missile has a surface to surface capability: Imagine a ripple of a dozen of those coming at the Chinese Destroyer at Mach 3+.
I sense the opposite. Time will tell but then it will be too late IMHO.
Place our bets on what?
How the Cowpens handles its bow ramming the tank-landing ship broadsides?
What do you think would happen to the captain if he decided to ram the Chi-Com ship?
How about we embargo all products coming from China?
Won’t be long and the Chinese products currently being imported won’t be purchased due to lack of American dollars as nobody will be working anyway.
Good pics.. And while we shouldn’t put up with any harassment from the Chinese, I’m a Texan, and I’d probably tease anyone that named their boat “Cowpens” at least a little..........
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