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CRS: Breaking Chinas ASBM Kill Chain
TAIPEI A new report by the U.S. Congressional Research Service (CRS) suggests Chinas new anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM) can be countered, and is not, necessarily, the game-changer many defense analysts predict.
Ronald ORourke, a CRS specialist in naval affairs, argues that Chinas new DF-21D ASBM, dubbed the carrier killer, can be defeated by employing a combination of active and passive measures along the ASBMs kill chain.
Despite dire warnings by a variety of defense analysts that the U.S. risks losing an aircraft carrier to a Chinese ASBM, ORourke said the U.S. Air Force has already taken [Chinas] kill chains apart to the nth degree.
According to China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities, released in late March, ORourke said there are several areas in the sequence of events (kill chain) where active and passive measures can be taken to stop the missile. These include when the target ship is detected and identified, when that data is transmitted to the ASBM launcher, firing the ASBM, and when the ASBM re-entry vehicle finds the target ship.
ORourke makes a number of suggestions.
First, the U.S. Navy could do more to control electromagnetic emissions or using deception emitters.
Second, it could also acquire systems for disabling or jamming Chinas long-range maritime surveillance and targeting systems, destroy ASBMs in various stages of flight, and decoy and confuse ASBMs as they approach their intended targets.
Options for destroying ASBMs in flight include developing versions of the SM-3 Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD) interceptor missile, including the planned SM-3 Block IIA.
The U.S. Navy also should accelerate the procurement of the Sea-Based Terminal interceptor, which is the planned successor of the SM-2 Block IV terminal-phase BMD interceptor.
Other options include accelerating the development and deployment of electromagnetic rail guns, and accelerating development and deployment of shipboard high-power free electron lasers and solid state lasers, says the report.
More could be done to develop an ASBM endo-atmospheric target, which currently appears dead in the Pentagon.
ASBMs could be defeated as they approach their intended targets by equipping ships with electronic warfare systems or systems for generating radar-opaque smoke clouds that confuse an ASBMs terminal-guidance radar.
ORourke said the U.S. Congress should question if the Flight III version of the DDG-51 Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, which the U.S. Navy plans to procure in 2016, will have sufficient anti-air warfare (AAW) and BMD capability to perform projected air and missile defense missions against Chinese forces, including ASBMs.
The Flight III DDG-51 would have more AAW and BMD capability than the current Flight IIA DDG-51 design but less AAW and BMD capability than was envisioned for a now-canceled CG(X) Next Generation Cruiser. This is largely because the Flight III DDG-51 would be equipped with a 12- or 14-foot-diameter version of the new Air and Missile Defense Radar (AMDR) that would have more sensitivity than the SPY-1 radar on Flight IIA DDG-51s, but less sensitivity than the substantially larger version of the AMDR that was envisioned for the CG(X), ORourke said.
CRS: Breaking China’s ASBM Kill Chain | Defense News | defensenews.com
TAIPEI A new report by the U.S. Congressional Research Service (CRS) suggests Chinas new anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM) can be countered, and is not, necessarily, the game-changer many defense analysts predict.
Ronald ORourke, a CRS specialist in naval affairs, argues that Chinas new DF-21D ASBM, dubbed the carrier killer, can be defeated by employing a combination of active and passive measures along the ASBMs kill chain.
Despite dire warnings by a variety of defense analysts that the U.S. risks losing an aircraft carrier to a Chinese ASBM, ORourke said the U.S. Air Force has already taken [Chinas] kill chains apart to the nth degree.
According to China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities, released in late March, ORourke said there are several areas in the sequence of events (kill chain) where active and passive measures can be taken to stop the missile. These include when the target ship is detected and identified, when that data is transmitted to the ASBM launcher, firing the ASBM, and when the ASBM re-entry vehicle finds the target ship.
ORourke makes a number of suggestions.
First, the U.S. Navy could do more to control electromagnetic emissions or using deception emitters.
Second, it could also acquire systems for disabling or jamming Chinas long-range maritime surveillance and targeting systems, destroy ASBMs in various stages of flight, and decoy and confuse ASBMs as they approach their intended targets.
Options for destroying ASBMs in flight include developing versions of the SM-3 Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD) interceptor missile, including the planned SM-3 Block IIA.
The U.S. Navy also should accelerate the procurement of the Sea-Based Terminal interceptor, which is the planned successor of the SM-2 Block IV terminal-phase BMD interceptor.
Other options include accelerating the development and deployment of electromagnetic rail guns, and accelerating development and deployment of shipboard high-power free electron lasers and solid state lasers, says the report.
More could be done to develop an ASBM endo-atmospheric target, which currently appears dead in the Pentagon.
ASBMs could be defeated as they approach their intended targets by equipping ships with electronic warfare systems or systems for generating radar-opaque smoke clouds that confuse an ASBMs terminal-guidance radar.
ORourke said the U.S. Congress should question if the Flight III version of the DDG-51 Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, which the U.S. Navy plans to procure in 2016, will have sufficient anti-air warfare (AAW) and BMD capability to perform projected air and missile defense missions against Chinese forces, including ASBMs.
The Flight III DDG-51 would have more AAW and BMD capability than the current Flight IIA DDG-51 design but less AAW and BMD capability than was envisioned for a now-canceled CG(X) Next Generation Cruiser. This is largely because the Flight III DDG-51 would be equipped with a 12- or 14-foot-diameter version of the new Air and Missile Defense Radar (AMDR) that would have more sensitivity than the SPY-1 radar on Flight IIA DDG-51s, but less sensitivity than the substantially larger version of the AMDR that was envisioned for the CG(X), ORourke said.
CRS: Breaking China’s ASBM Kill Chain | Defense News | defensenews.com