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HOW CHINA HAS OVERTAKEN JAPAN IN NAVAL POWER AND WHY IT MATTERS

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HOW CHINA HAS OVERTAKEN JAPAN IN NAVAL POWER AND WHY IT MATTERS
JUNE 22, 2020
By Toshi Yoshihara

16f3c3adf6297036513182-scaled-e1592532490888-672x372.jpg

A major reversal of fortunes at sea has gone largely unnoticed. Over the past decade, the Chinese Navy sped past the Japanese maritime service across key measures of material prowess. The trendlines suggest that China will soon permanently displace Japan as the leading regional naval power in Asia. This historic power transition will have repercussions across the Indo-Pacific in the years to come. It behooves policymakers to pay attention to this overlooked but consequential shift in the naval balance between two great seafaring nations.

The Power Transition at Sea

The growing power gap between the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) and the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) is stark and will widen at an accelerated pace. China already boasts the largest navy in the world with more than 300 ships and submarines. By comparison, the JMSDF’s naval strength in 2019 included four light helicopter carriers, two cruisers, 34 destroyers, 11 frigates, three amphibious assault ships, six fast-attack missile boats, and 21 submarines. By 2030, the PLAN could have more than 450 ships and close to 110 submarines while the JMSDF will likely not be much larger than it is today.1

In aggregate tonnage for principal surface combatants, a rough measure of latent capacity and capability, China surpassed Japan in 2013. By 2020, the PLAN exceeded the JMSDF in total tonnage by about 40 percent. By average tonnage per combatant, a more precise measure of capacity and capability, the Japanese fleet continues to maintain a comfortable lead of about 45 percent over its Chinese counterpart. Japan’s position, however, may not hold for long as China puts to sea more carriers, cruisers, and destroyers.

In terms of firepower, the vertical launch system (VLS)—a grouping of silos that holds and fires shipborne missiles—furnishes a useful proxy for a fleet’s lethality. In this category of naval power, China’s catchup story is stunning. The JMSDF introduced VLS a decade earlier than the PLAN in the early 1990s. Yet, the Chinese quickly caught up and zoomed past the Japanese in 2017. By 2020, the PLAN had 75 percent more VLS cells than the JMSDF.

VLS-cells-e1592532654828.png

Number of VLS cells on JMSDF and PLAN destroyers and in the total surface fleets (CSBA)

More troubling still, China’s large arsenal of anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCMs) outranges that of the JMSDF by considerable distances. In a hypothetical fleet-on-fleet engagement, the PLAN could launch large salvoes of ASCMs that could reach its opponent’s warships well before the Japanese side could get within range to hit back, conferring a significant first-strike advantage to China. It remains to be seen whether Japan will introduce enough long-range ship-killing missiles, including the repurposed Standard Missile 6 air-defense interceptors, to close the range gap.

China’s air force and rocket force further tip the scales in its favor. Chinese airpower and missiles ashore would almost certainly join the fray in any conceivable conflict. The JMSDF’s surface fleet would have to fend off volleys of air-launched ASCMs and land-based anti-ship ballistic and cruise missiles as well as missiles fired from ships and submarines. Japan’s maritime service thus inhabits a vexing and inhospitable operational environment.

Beyond Bean Counting

Fleet size, tonnage, and firepower do not provide a full measure of a navy’s combat power. Operational proficiency, tactical elan, regular and extended deployments in blue-water environments, and real combat experience are equally critical, if not more so, when evaluating a navy’s prospects for fighting and winning a war at sea. Even in this qualitative area, however, it is no longer axiomatic that Japan holds a decisive advantage over China.

16f3c3adee997036511781-scaled-e1592532364729-2048x1256.jpg

PLA Navy aircraft carrier Shandong berthed at a naval port in Sanya

Over the past decade, the Chinese Navy has proven itself a capable expeditionary service. The PLAN’s various open ocean activities suggest that it has accumulated substantial at-sea experience. Notably, the Chinese Navy has sustained a continuous rotation of anti-piracy patrols in the Indian Ocean since 2009, an impressive feat by any measure. The PLAN has also dispatched flotillas for long-distance transits throughout the Western Pacific and beyond.

Peacetime exercises and constabulary operations may not be reliable indicators of how the Chinese Navy will perform in combat. The well-worn remark that China has not fought a war since 1979 remains valid. Of course, neither has Japan since 1945. The reality is that no one knows for certain how each side will fare until the shooting starts.

It remains unclear how the economic contraction following the COVID-19 crisis will impact China’s investment in its navy. What is certain, however, is that Japan will not escape the economic fallout from the global pandemic and the attending fiscal pressures on defense spending. The momentum behind the Chinese naval buildup, moreover, will likely not slow down enough to reverse the tilting naval balance in Beijing’s favor.

Why the Naval Imbalance Matters

Japan’s eroding naval position not only reduces its ability to defend the liberal international order, but it also weakens the deterrent posture of the U.S.-Japan alliance and, in the process, undercuts American strategy in Asia. Consider the centrality of Japanese seapower to the regional security architecture.

In peacetime, Japan’s maritime service helps deter aggression and keep the seas open to all, an essential condition for free trade and global prosperity. Should deterrence fail, the JMSDF would sweep clear the major maritime approaches to the theater of operations along the Asian littorals and conduct operations to obtain and exercise sea control alongside the U.S. Navy. Moreover, the sea service complements U.S. naval strengths, including undersea warfare, while making up for American capability gaps in such areas as minesweeping.

A revisionist China must carefully consider Japan’s still-formidable maritime service when calculating its options vis-à-vis the United States. Beijing would likely think twice about coercion or aggression if it believed that the alliance possessed overwhelming military superiority. Conversely, if Beijing concluded that Tokyo was becoming a crack in the armor, then it might be tempted to gamble.

The bottom line is that it is the combined power of the U.S. Navy’s forward-deployed naval forces and the JMSDF that helps to keep the peace in Asia. It is thus imperative that U.S. policymakers perceive the relative decline of Japanese seapower as a proxy for the corrosion of American power in the Indo-Pacific.

If past is prologue, China’s rapid accumulation of naval power—and Japan’s inability to keep up—portends unwelcome great power relations. The most striking historical parallel is Britain’s naval decline during the Cold War. In the late 1970s, the Soviets had far outstripped the British across major measures of naval power just as the PLAN is eclipsing the JMSDF today. By the early 1980s, it became increasingly doubtful whether Britain could defend its own backyard against Soviet designs.

Britain’s relative decline posed global dilemmas for the United States. If the U.S. Navy were tied down in an emergency elsewhere, there was concern that the Soviets might seize the occasion to test European resolve in the North Atlantic. It was feared then that the Royal Navy’s impotence in the face of a Soviet naval challenge would severely undermine stability, deterrence, and allied cohesion while opening the way for Moscow to advance its aims in Europe.

It does not stretch the imagination to foresee a similar risk today. American global commitments, particularly in Europe and the Middle East, could draw Washington’s attention to faraway theaters. In such circumstances, the United States would likely expect Japan to do much more to deter, if not oppose, Chinese opportunism. The extent to which the JMSDF upholds its end of the bargain would be a major test for the alliance.

Allied Implications

To be sure, any assessment of the Indo-Pacific strategic balance would be incomplete without accounting for the U.S. military, including its forward-deployed assets and its surge forces around the world. The combined naval power of the United States and Japan still outweighs that of China. But that margin of superiority is diminishing as China continues its ascent at sea, pulling even farther ahead of Japan.

Consequently, the security partnership’s capacity to deter aggression is likely to come under more strain. Equally worrisome, the PLAN and its sister services are already able to project power across and well beyond the first island chain, deliver ample firepower over long distances, and impose heavy costs on U.S. and Japanese forces. These developments are likely to challenge, if not upend, longstanding allied assumptions about escalation dominance and warfighting.

Allied policymakers must recognize that a historic power shift has already taken place in maritime Asia. For too long, defense planners and the broader strategic community have focused exclusively on the bilateral Sino-U.S. naval rivalry while slighting the local balance between China and Japan. In the past, when allied superiority and the JMSDF’s qualitative advances appeared insuperable, it was safe to take Japan’s role for granted.

Yet, today, as the balance tilts increasingly in China’s favor, Japan’s relative decline could emerge as a weak link in the alliance’s deterrent posture. Understanding the extent to which Japan has fallen behind, to include how the Chinese perceive the local imbalance, should assume a far more prominent place in allied decision-making. Such a comprehensive estimate must be integral to the allied calculus about strategy, posture, operations, and competitiveness.

http://cimsec.org/how-china-has-overtaken-japan-in-naval-power-and-why-it-matters/44370
 
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There is no doubt that the PLAN has become larger and in some areas have achieved an advantage.

But there are several factors not accounted for in the article.

One is aircraft carrier quality. The 3rd PLAN carrier may prove the point of change but J-15 is still the weaker compared to the F-35B that Japan plans on acquire for the Izumo-class DDHs.

Another factor is Maritime Patrol Aircraft. The P-1 will continue to be a top class MBA for some time. And Japan will procure many of these. While these are not ships, they are part of the JMSDF and are directly involved in the naval role.

Another point not mentioned in the article are new Japanese missiles. Previous missiles have been limited in range to around 200 km because of constitution condition to not possess offensive weapons. But that has ended. Japan iscurrently developing new air, ship, and land-based anti-ship missiles with around 400-450km range. That includes the recently ASM-3 missiles which a long range version is in development.

Hypersonic missiles development has also started with the goal of having glider hypersonic antinship capability by 2028.

The number of destroyers may still increase. Past long term plans had the standard of obtaining a combat surface fleet of 47 ships in the 2000s. That went to 48, and then to 54 in the more recent ones. In that way, the requirement on the number of subs have also increased, going from 16 to the current 22. A new class of combat ships are also going to be introduce, basically corvette size. 12 of these are currently planned. With an increasing defense budget, the surface combat ship size may yet still increase some more.

Then there's the procurement of foreign weapons such as JASSM which would increase type of weapons available.
 
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With an increasing defense budget, the surface combat ship size may yet still increase some more.
Your budget can only be left behind further every passing year by China, defence industry in the long run depends on a country's overall economic, industrial and manufacturing power, time is on China's side, in recent couples of years, Chinese navy has developed like crazy, stunning the whole world.
 
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Anti China clowns in here will say this is fake, impossibru :rofl: Even who say and write this article is the japanese one
 
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Your budget can only be left behind further every passing year by China, defence industry in the long run depends on a country's overall economic, industrial and manufacturing power, time is on China's side, in recent couples of years, Chinese navy has developed like crazy, stunning the whole world.

Well, in the past 5 or so years, it was unknown how many Type 55 or Type 52D destroyers were going to be made. Every year, evidence for more of these ships being manufactured kept on happening. But recently, it looks like production of destroyers has reached the end. The count on identified Type 52D has been 25 hulls for some time now. Word of passing 8 Type 55 destroyers has yet to happen. Its a respectable navy size. Frigate production has ended some time ago as well, at 30 ships. So the "racing further and further ahead" in these ship types has actually not been happening for a year or 2 now.

Anti China clowns in here will say this is fake, impossibru :rofl: Even who say and write this article is the japanese one

It's not anti-China anything. Just anti on some of the policies.

There is plenty of bad information about Chinese military development on the PRC side as well. Go ask the folks over at sino-defense forums.
 
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Well, in the past 5 or so years, it was unknown how many Type 55 or Type 52D destroyers were going to be made. Every year, evidence for more of these ships being manufactured kept on happening. But recently, it looks like production of destroyers has reached the end. The count on identified Type 52D has been 25 hulls for some time now. Word of passing 8 Type 55 destroyers has yet to happen. Its a respectable navy size. Frigate production has ended some time ago as well, at 30 ships. So the "racing further and further ahead" in these ship types has actually not been happening for a year or 2 now.



It's not anti-China anything. Just anti on some of the policies.

There is plenty of bad information about Chinese military development on the PRC side as well. Go ask the folks over at sino-defense forums.

Don't make excuse :P


Whoa you must be stay in wrong Sino-defence forum.
As long as I stay in Sino-defence forum have many good information and mostly members praise China's Military Development as the Strongest in Asia.
 
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Don't make excuse :P


Whoa you must be stay in wrong Sino-defence forum.
As long as I stay in Sino-defence forum have many good information and mostly members praise China's Military Development as the Strongest in Asia.
Dont delude yourself like Ah Q. Real life is different wt internet life.

In real life, CN had to cede lands to Myanmar, one of poorest ASEAN nations and Myanmar also dropped bomb to kill Cnese whenever they want :lol:
 
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It does not matter how many numbers China churns. One large enough altercation and practically the entire world will turn against China after all that has transgressed in the last 6 months.
 
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Dont delude yourself like Ah Q. Real life is different wt internet life.

In real life, CN had to cede lands to Myanmar, one of poorest ASEAN nations and Myanmar also dropped bomb to kill Cnese whenever they want :lol:
The Vietnamese clown is here.
 
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Imagine an hypothetical scenario whereby Liaoning or Shandong carrier group engage "Izumo group" today somewhere in the middle of ocean and start fighting, Izumo will be sinked.

Your F35 have not came onboard.

In future, when your F35 is ready, China FC31 will be ready also.

But then China is not interested to engage anyone at open sea, China will choose to fight within first Island chain. So whatever Japan navy have, she have no chance, now or future.

We can further discuss.

There is no doubt that the PLAN has become larger and in some areas have achieved an advantage.

But there are several factors not accounted for in the article.

One is aircraft carrier quality. The 3rd PLAN carrier may prove the point of change but J-15 is still the weaker compared to the F-35B that Japan plans on acquire for the Izumo-class DDHs.

Another factor is Maritime Patrol Aircraft. The P-1 will continue to be a top class MBA for some time. And Japan will procure many of these. While these are not ships, they are part of the JMSDF and are directly involved in the naval role.

Another point not mentioned in the article are new Japanese missiles. Previous missiles have been limited in range to around 200 km because of constitution condition to not possess offensive weapons. But that has ended. Japan iscurrently developing new air, ship, and land-based anti-ship missiles with around 400-450km range. That includes the recently ASM-3 missiles which a long range version is in development.

Hypersonic missiles development has also started with the goal of having glider hypersonic antinship capability by 2028.

The number of destroyers may still increase. Past long term plans had the standard of obtaining a combat surface fleet of 47 ships in the 2000s. That went to 48, and then to 54 in the more recent ones. In that way, the requirement on the number of subs have also increased, going from 16 to the current 22. A new class of combat ships are also going to be introduce, basically corvette size. 12 of these are currently planned. With an increasing defense budget, the surface combat ship size may yet still increase some more.

Then there's the procurement of foreign weapons such as JASSM which would increase type of weapons available.
 
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Imagine an hypothetical scenario whereby Liaoning or Shandong carrier group engage "Izumo group" today somewhere in the middle of ocean and start fighting, Izumo will be sinked.

Your F35 have not came onboard.

In future, when your F35 is ready, China FC31 will be ready also.

But then China is not interested to engage anyone at open sea, China will choose to fight within first Island chain. So whatever Japan navy have, she have no chance, now or future.

We can further discuss.


Soon :enjoy:
005xwoBEgy1gfluz9xjhqj335s19tnpf.jpg
 
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Well, in the past 5 or so years, it was unknown how many Type 55 or Type 52D destroyers were going to be made. Every year, evidence for more of these ships being manufactured kept on happening. But recently, it looks like production of destroyers has reached the end. The count on identified Type 52D has been 25 hulls for some time now. Word of passing 8 Type 55 destroyers has yet to happen. Its a respectable navy size. Frigate production has ended some time ago as well, at 30 ships. So the "racing further and further ahead" in these ship types has actually not been happening for a year or 2 now.
Since when did China stop building 055 destroyers? Last time I checked they were still in construction. With all likelihood, the PLAN is going to build more than 8 055 destroyers. As far as I'm concerned, the growth in the underwater PLAN is even more concerning than the surface growth. I do agree with you that the surface fleet growth is likely to decrease over time ... but I believe the underwater fleet growth will rise. The 093B and 095 subs will pose a very new, large threat to JMSDF and USN forces in the First Island Chain, not to mention all the conventional subs. Barely any attention is given to Chinese subs because they are so secretive ... and yet that is where so much of the danger lies. I honestly think ppl have lost track of the numbers and crucially the technological developments of Chinese subs, particular the nuclear ones.

Imagine an hypothetical scenario whereby Liaoning or Shandong carrier group engage "Izumo group" today somewhere in the middle of ocean and start fighting, Izumo will be sinked.

Your F35 have not came onboard.

In future, when your F35 is ready, China FC31 will be ready also.

But then China is not interested to engage anyone at open sea, China will choose to fight within first Island chain. So whatever Japan navy have, she have no chance, now or future.

We can further discuss.
Next year, the carrier based J-35 (successor to FC-31) will be demoed.
 
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I guess Japan F35B wont come online somewhere until 2025. Then Japan still need some time to build the operational readiness of the carrier group.

Since when did China stop building 055 destroyers? Last time I checked they were still in construction. With all likelihood, the PLAN is going to build more than 8 055 destroyers. As far as I'm concerned, the growth in the underwater PLAN is even more concerning than the surface growth. I do agree with you that the surface fleet growth is likely to decrease over time ... but I believe the underwater fleet growth will rise. The 093B and 095 subs will pose a very new, large threat to JMSDF and USN forces in the First Island Chain, not to mention all the conventional subs. Barely any attention is given to Chinese subs because they are so secretive ... and yet that is where so much of the danger lies. I honestly think ppl have lost track of the numbers and crucially the technological developments of Chinese subs, particular the nuclear ones.


Next year, the carrier based J-35 (successor to FC-31) will be demoed.
 
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Since when did China stop building 055 destroyers? Last time I checked they were still in construction. With all likelihood, the PLAN is going to build more than 8 055 destroyers. As far as I'm concerned, the growth in the underwater PLAN is even more concerning than the surface growth. I do agree with you that the surface fleet growth is likely to decrease over time ... but I believe the underwater fleet growth will rise. The 093B and 095 subs will pose a very new, large threat to JMSDF and USN forces in the First Island Chain, not to mention all the conventional subs. Barely any attention is given to Chinese subs because they are so secretive ... and yet that is where so much of the danger lies. I honestly think ppl have lost track of the numbers and crucially the technological developments of Chinese subs, particular the nuclear ones.

My post wasn't an opinion on PLAN growth. It was strictly observation on growth. Various stages can be observed with increasing number of destroyers. Earliest indication is word of sorts for new constrction. Then is modules in dry dock. Then it's assembly of modules. Then it's launching and fitting out at sea. Then it's sea trials. Then its finally entering service. With the Type 52 destroyers, it has always been something like word on 2 more, 4 at module state, 3 in assembly, 1 launched and fitting out, 2 on sea trials, and then with entered service go up from 4 to 6 to 10 etc. Right now there are 13 commissioned Type 52Ds. The rest of the accounted of the total accounted 25 hulls are in sea trial/fitting out/final asseembly phases. There has been no indications of more in the "on word" or "module fabrication" state. So the end of the pipeline seems to be at 25. Maybe it'll continue as a new Type 52 version or some new class, but no indication yet.
 
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