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China threatens US blue waters

Masterio92

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Eric S. Margolis (America Angle)

23 August 2011
The mighty US Navy won’t say so publicly, but it’s increasingly worried by China’s development of new anti-ship missiles.

The chief worry is China’s new DF-21D whose primary target is America’s huge aircraft carriers.
According to Chinese sources, the DF-21D anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM) has recently become operational in limited numbers. Originally developed for submarines, the DF-21D is said to have a range of 2,700km and at least some capability to strike moving targets.


China’s military is hard at work on satellites, long-range backscatter radar, submarines, and drones that can identify moving naval targets up to 3,000 km distance. These overlapping sensors will provide accurate, real-time targeting data for the DF-21D and other shorter-ranged sea, air and land-based anti-ship missiles.

The US Navy insists its carriers are not threatened by any of China’s new missiles and retain their freedom of action off China. But the DF-21D can cover the entire South China Sea, including Taiwan.

This could be extremely bad news for the US Navy, which deploys 11 aircraft carrier groups that enable the US to project power around the globe.
Batteries of DF-21D’s based safely inland may keep the US Navy far off China’s coasts, isolate Taiwan, and threaten US bases in Japan, Okinawa and Guam. In fact, the mere existence of the DF-21D’s and their deployment in sizeable numbers may be enough to keep US carriers at least 2,000 km from China’s coasts, thus beyond the useful range of the carrier’s strike aircraft.


As a writer on naval affairs, I’ve long been convinced that big attack aircraft carriers are going the way of the battleship. At around 100,000 tons, they are huge targets, high in the water, easily detected at long range by radar and infrared sensors. Each US attack carrier carries close to one million gallons of aviation fuel plus hundreds of tons of munitions.

The US Navy made carrier operations into a high science during World War II. The USN was famed for its brilliant damage-control techniques that prevented the loss of many US warships during WWII.

But anti-ship missiles are lethal to carriers. Layered anti-ship missile defense can stop small number of attacking missiles. But if enough high-speed missiles are fired, and from different directions, at least one or two will permeate carrier and escort defenses.

Just one missile, filled with explosives and fuel, hitting a carrier will cause massive damage and fires that will put the great capitol ship out of action. I have joined numerous naval warfare simulations: in almost every case, some anti-ship missiles fired by enemy aircraft and subs inevitably leaked through layered defenses and hit the carriers. Each carrier and its escorts costs over $25 billion (not including its aircraft). They simply cannot be risked against relatively inexpensive Chinese missiles.

Officially, the US Navy denies claims its beloved carriers are increasingly vulnerable. The Navy’s brass is dominated by former naval aviators, just as the pre-war US Navy was run by battleship admirals. There is huge institutional bias against abandoning big attack carriers, just as there is bitter Navy and Air Force opposition to abandoning manned fighter aircraft and relying on drones.

Which makes all the more amazing an article in the May 2011 issue of the US Naval Institute Proceedings (for which I’ve written) by two Pentagon strategists urging an immediate end to building aircraft carriers, “Proceedings” is the voice of the US naval establishment.

For this heresy to be printed is a bombshell. But a needed one. It’s time the US Navy face facts and plan for the obsolescence of its attack carriers. There will still be a role for smaller carriers carrying drones and helicopters, but in wartime, the days of the mighty flattop that won the epic WWII victories at Midway and the Marianas are over.

China has recognised this by deploying a mid-sized carrier this month that may be equipped with fixed-wing aircraft, drones, and helicopters.

It will be hugely expensive for the near bankrupt US to develop new systems that can counter China’s naval missiles. This means the US 7th Fleet will have to patrol far offshore where its influence will be sharply diminished, or even neutralised. The North Pacific will no longer be an American lake.

Eric Margolis is a veteran US journalist

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Bye bye to carriers and US hegemony,...... and hey who's next to pour billions in carrier's projects, and where they will hide it ?:smokin:
 
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Rubbish! China does not threaten anybody let alone her largest trading partner

May be you'r right, but may be the military built up is an ultimate play into economic relationship or diffrerences in economic philosphy? Btw 2700 km is a big chase after a target if it is true
 
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May be you'r right, but may be the military built up is an ultimate play into economic relationship or diffrerences in economic philosphy? Btw 2700 km is a big chase after a target if it is true

What is closer to the truth is that for some, the creation of China as a bogey is linked to their institutions funding - the more these people can scare others, the greater their funding, they seem t be convinced. China is a growing economic power, but in relation to the US or any branch of service in the US, it's a midget, and that is because so much work, perhaps decades worth, is still left to be done to raise standards of living in China, comparable to those of developed countries.
 
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What is closer to the truth is that for some, the creation of China as a bogey is linked to their institutions funding - the more these people can scare others, the greater their funding, they seem t be convinced. China is a growing economic power, but in relation to the US or any branch of service in the US, it's a midget, and that is because so much work, perhaps decades worth, is still left to be done to raise standards of living in China, comparable to those of developed countries.

Well said. :tup:
 
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What is closer to the truth is that for some, the creation of China as a bogey is linked to their institutions funding - the more these people can scare others, the greater their funding, they seem t be convinced. China is a growing economic power, but in relation to the US or any branch of service in the US, it's a midget, and that is because so much work, perhaps decades worth, is still left to be done to raise standards of living in China, comparable to those of developed countries.

If you'r into living standard then US HDI rank is lower than Norway. There may be some regional and international interests which compel big powers to invest heavily into defence projects?
 
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All the Scandinavian countries are great. Great standard of living, but you never really hear about them. I guess that's a price you pay.
 
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What is closer to the truth is that for some, the creation of China as a bogey is linked to their institutions funding - the more these people can scare others, the greater their funding, they seem t be convinced. China is a growing economic power, but in relation to the US or any branch of service in the US, it's a midget, and that is because so much work, perhaps decades worth, is still left to be done to raise standards of living in China, comparable to those of developed countries.
The goal of the military is produce a reasonably technical assessment of threats and potential threats. The word 'threat' here is to be as devoid of political contexts as possible. Not complete absence, but only in appropriate places. Not sure if you are aware of this but EVERY military does it.
 
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absolutely.if china wants to threaten US it will not be possible to do so.china can be of no match to America.it's still a baby in front of the navy might of US.
 
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