What's new

Revealed: How the U.S. Navy Would Destroy a Chinese Aircraft Carrier

Zarvan

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Apr 28, 2011
Messages
54,470
Reaction score
87
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
ussthesullivans-firingmissi.jpg

America's answer to the 'carrier-killer missile.'

James Holmes
May 30, 2016

TweetShareShare

Ah, yes, the “carrier-killer.” China is forever touting the array of guided missiles its weaponeers have devised to pummel U.S. Navy nuclear-powered aircraft carriers (CVNs). Most prominent among them are its DF-21D and DF-26 antiship ballistic missiles (ASBMs), which the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has made a mainstay of China’s anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) defenses.

Beijing has made believers of important audiences, including the scribes who toil away at the Pentagon producing estimates of Chinese martial might. Indeed, the most recent annual report on Chinese military power states matter-of-factly that the PLA can now use DF-21Ds to “attack ships, including aircraft carriers,” more than nine hundred statute miles from China’s shorelines.

Scary. But the U.S. Navy has carrier-killers of its own. Or, more accurately, it has shipkillers of its own: what can disable or sink a flattop can make short work of lesser warships. And antiship weaponry is multiplying in numbers, range, and lethality as the navy reawakens from its post-Cold War holiday from history. Whose carrier-killer trumps whose will hinge in large part on where a sea fight takes place.


That carrier-killer imagery resonates with Western audiences comes as little surprise. It implies that Chinese rocketeers can send the pride of the U.S. Navy to the bottom from a distance, and sink U.S. efforts to succor Asian allies in the process. Worse, it implies that PLA commanders could pull off such a world-historical feat without deigning to send ships to sea or warplanes into the central blue. Close the firing key on the ASBM launcher, and presto!, it happens.

Well, maybe. Why obsess over technical minutiae like firing range? For one thing, the nine-hundred-mile range cited for the DF-21D far exceeds the reach of carrier-based aircraft. A carrier task force, consequently, could take a heckuva beating just arriving on Asian battlegrounds. And the range mismatch could get worse. Unveiled at the PLA’s military parade through Beijing last fall, the DF-26 will reportedly sport a maximum firing range of 1,800-2,500 miles.

If the technology pans out, PLA ballistic missiles could menace U.S. and allied warships plying the seas anywhere within Asia’s second island chain. The upper figure for DF-26 range, moreover, would extend ASBMs’ reach substantially beyond the island chain.

From an Atlantic perspective, striking a ship east of Guam from coastal China is like smiting a ship cruising east of Greenland from a missile battery in downtown Washington, DC. Reaching Guam would become a hazardous prospect for task forces steaming westward from Hawaii or the American west coast, while shipping based at Guam, Japan, or other Western Pacific outposts would live under the constant shadow of missile attack.

Now, it’s worth noting that the PLA has never tested the DF-21D over water, five-plus years after initially deploying it. Still less has the DF-26 undergone testing under battle conditions. That’s cause to pause and reflect. As the immortal Murphy might counsel, technology not perfected in peacetime tends to disappoint its user in wartime.

Still, an ASBM will be a useful piece of kit if Chinese engineers have made it work. The U.S. military boasts no counterpart to China’s family of ASBMs. Nor is it likely to. The United States is bound by treaty not to develop mid-range ballistic missiles comparable to the DF-21D or DF-26. Even if Washington canceled its treaty commitments today, it would take years if not decades for weapons engineers to design, test, and field a shipkilling ballistic missile from a cold start.

Still, the U.S. Navy isn’t without options in naval war. Far from it. How would American mariners would dispatch an enemy flattop in combat? The answer is the default answer we give in my department in Newport: it depends.

It would depend, that is, on where the encounter took place. A fleet duel involving carriers would take a far different trajectory on the open sea—remote from fire support from Fortress China, the PLA’s unsinkable aircraft carrier—than if it unfolded within range of ASBMs, cruise missiles, or aircraft emplaced along seacoasts or offshore islands.

The former would be a fleet-on-fleet affair: whatever firepower each force totes to the scene of action decides the outcome, seamanship, tactical acumen, and élan being equal. The latter would let PLA commanders hurl land-based weaponry into the fray. But at the same time, the U.S. Navy would probably fight alongside allied navies—from the likes of Japan, South Korea or Australia—in near-shore combat. And, like China, the allies could harness Asia’s congested offshore geography, using land-based armaments to augment their fleets’ innate combat punch.

In short, the two tactical arenas differ starkly from each other. The latter is messier and more prone to chance, uncertainty, and the fog of war—not to mention the derring-do of an enterprising foe.

Submarine warfare would constitute a common denominator in U.S. maritime strategy for oceanic and near-shore combat. Nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSNs) such as U.S. Virginia- or Los Angeles-class boats can raid surface shipping on the high seas. Or they can slip underneath A2/AD defenses to assault enemy vessels, including flattops, in their coastal redoubts.

In short, SSNs are workhorses in U.S. naval operations. That’s why it’s a grave mistake for Congress to let the size of the SSN fleet dwindle from fifty-three today to forty-one in 2029. That’s a 23 percent drop in the number of hulls at a time when China is bulking up its fleet of nuclear- and conventionally propelled subs—to as many as 78 by 2020—and Russia is rejuvenating its silent-running sub force.

American submarines, then, are carrier-killers regardless of the tactical setting. Now, there’s a bit of a futurist feel to talk about battling Chinese carrier groups. At present the PLA Navy has just one flattop, a refitted Soviet vessel dubbed Liaoning. That vessel is and will probably remain a training carrier, grooming aviators and ship crews for the operational carriers—most likely improved versions of Liaoning—that are reportedly undergoing construction.

Let’s suppose Chinese shipyards complete the PLA’s second carrier—China’s first indigenously built carrier—at the same clip that Newport News Shipbuilding completed USS Forrestal, the nation’s first supercarrier and a conventionally propelled vessel with roughly the same dimensions and complexity as Liaoning. It took just over three years to build Forrestal, from the time shipbuilders laid her keel until she was placed in commission.

Let’s further suppose that the PLA Navy has made great strides in learning how to operate carrier task forces at sea. If so, the navy will integrate the new flattop seamlessly and speedily into operations, making it a battleworthy addition to China’s oceangoing fleet. Our hypothetical high-seas clash thus could take place circa 2020.

In 2020, as today, the carrier air wing will remain the surface U.S. Navy’s chief carrier-killer. U.S. CVNs can carry about 85 tactical aircraft. While estimates of the size of a future Chinese flattop’s air wing vary, let’s take a high-end estimate of 50 fixed-wing planes and helicopters. That means, conservatively speaking, that the U.S. CVN’s complement will be 70 percent larger than its PLA Navy opponent’s.

And in all likelihood, the American complement will be superior to the Chinese on a warbird-for-warbird basis. It appears future PLA Navy flattops will, like Liaoning, be outfitted with ski jumps on their bows to vault aircraft into the sky. That limits the weight—and thus the load of fuel and weapons—that a Chinese aircraft can haul while still getting off the flight deck.

U.S. CVNs, meanwhile, slingshot heavy-laden fighter/attack jets off their flight decks using steam or electromagnetic catapults. More armaments translates into a heavier-hitting naval air force, more fuel into greater range and time on station.

For example, F-18E/F Super Hornet fighter/attack jets can operate against targets around 400 nautical miles distant, not counting the additional distance their weapons travel after firing. That’s roughly comparable to the combat radius advertised for Chinese J-15 carrier planes—but again, a U.S. air wing will outnumber its Chinese counterpart while packing more punch per airframe. Advantage: U.S. Navy.

By 2020, moreover, promising antiship weaponry may have matured and joined the U.S. arsenal. At present the surface navy’s main antiship armament is the elderly Harpoon cruise missile, a “bird” of 1970s vintage with a range exceeding 60 miles. That pales in comparison with the latest PLA Navy birds—most notably the YJ-18, which boasts a range of 290 nautical miles.

Weaponeers are working at helter-skelter speed to remedy the U.S. Navy’s range shortfall. Boeing, the Harpoon’s manufacturer, is doubling the bird’s range. The Pentagon’s Strategic Capabilities Office recently repurposed the SM-6 surface-to-air missile for antiship missions, doubling or tripling the surface fleet’s striking range against carrier or surface-action groups. And on it goes. Last year the navy tested an antiship variant of the Tomahawk cruise missile, reinventing a very—very—long-range capability that existed in the late Cold War. A new long-range antiship missile is undergoing development.


How the navy deploys new weaponry as it enters service is nearly as important as fielding the weapons themselves. Under a concept dubbed “distributed lethality,” naval officialdom wants to disperse firepower throughout the fleet while retaining the capacity to concentrate firepower on target. What that means in practical terms is arming more ships with antiship missiles, supplemented by gee-whiz technologies like electromagnetic railguns and shipboard lasers should they fulfill their promise.

The U.S. Navy, then, will deploy no single carrier-killer weapon. It will deploy many. Coupled with submarine warfare and naval aviation, newfangled surface-warfare implements will stand the U.S. Navy in good stead for blue-water engagements by 2020. Trouble is, an open-ocean engagement is the least likely scenario pitting America’s against China’s navy. What would they fight over in, say, the central Pacific? And what would prompt the PLA Navy to venture beyond range of shore fire support—surrendering its difference-maker in sea combat?

No. It’s far more likely any fleet action will take place within reach of PLA anti-access weaponry. The waters shoreward of the island chains are the waters Beijing cares about most. They’re also waters where the United States, the keeper of freedom of the sea and guarantor of Asian allies’ security, is steadfast about remaining the predominant sea power. Conflict is possible in offshore seas and skies should Beijing and Washington deadlock over some quarrel.

And waging it could prove troublesome in the extreme. Talk about distributed lethality! As U.S. forces close in on the Asian mainland, they must traverse an increasingly dense thicket of A2/AD defenses. Carrier-killer ASBMs could cut loose throughout the Western Pacific on day one of a naval war, peppering vessels already in the theater or lumbering westward from U.S. bases. Offshore sentinels—principally missile-armed small craft and diesel attack subs—could disgorge barrages of antiship cruise missiles.

As if that offshore picket line isn’t enough, there’s shore-based antiship weaponry, including not just ASBMs but cruise-missile batteries and missile-armed warplanes stationed along the Chinese seaboard. A nuclear-propelled carrier is a big ship but a small airfield—and it would face off against a host of land-based airfields and missile platforms. All in all, A2/AD poses a wicked tactical and operational problem for U.S. skippers.

The oceangoing PLA Navy fleet could fare far better in a Western Pacific trial of arms than in the open Pacific, the Indian Ocean, or some other faraway expanse. In short, the PLA Navy is a modern-day fortress fleet. Such a fleet shelters safely within range of shore-based defenses—supplementing its own firepower to make the difference in action against a stronger antagonist.

Fortress fleets often meet a grim fate in combat on the open sea, denuded of that protective umbrella. Closer to home—within reach of shore fire support—they can acquit themselves well. China is counting on it.

A quick history lesson in parting. The fortress-fleet concept had humble origins. Sea-power pundit Alfred Thayer Mahan coined it—I think—to describe Russian Navy commanders’ habit of staying within reach of a fort’s gunnery to fend off superior opponents. The fleet was ostensibly the fort’s forward defender against naval assault, but an outgunned fleet could use the fort’s artillery as a protective screen.


Mahan had the guns of Port Arthur, the maritime gateway to the Bohai Sea and thence to China’s capital city, in mind when writing about fortress fleets. The Russian squadron based at Port Arthur stayed mainly under the guns while confronting Admiral Heihachiro Tōgō’s Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) Combined Fleet during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905.

The Port Arthur squadron was more or less safe so long as it remained within range of Port Arthur’s guns, but it accomplished little. Tōgō & Co. made short work of the fleet when Russian commanders offered battle on the high seas in August 1904. The debacle repeated itself in May 1905, when the Combined Fleet and the Russian Baltic Fleet met in action at Tsushima Strait.

Russian fleets, then, were simply outclassed by their IJN antagonists on a mano-a-mano basis. But imagine what may have transpired had the gunners at Port Arthur been able to rain accurate fire on Japanese ships not just a few but scores or hundreds of miles distant. That would have extended Mahan’s fortress-fleet logic throughout the combat theater. With long-distance backup from the fort, Russian seafarers may have emerged the victors rather than suffering successive cataclysmic defeats. The weak would have won.

That’s a rough analogy to today. Fortress China is festooned with airfields and mobile antiship weaponry able to strike hundreds of miles out to sea. Yes, the U.S. Navy remains stronger than the PLA Navy in open-sea battle. A fleet-on-fleet engagement isolated from shore-based reinforcements would probably go America’s way. But that hypothetical result may not make much difference since the two navies are more likely to join battle in confined Asian waters than on the open ocean.

The U.S. Navy, it seems, is optimized for the blue-water conflagration that’s least likely to occur. Question marks surround who would prevail in the scenarios that are most menacing and most likely to occur. Carrier-killing munitions may make the fortress fleet a going concern at last, long after the age of Mahan. And that suits Beijing fine.

James Holmes is Professor of Strategy at the Naval War College and coauthor of Red Star over the Pacific. The views voiced here are his alone.

Image: US ships firing missiles. Wikimedia Commons/public domain.

http://nationalinterest.org/feature...destroy-chinese-aircraft-carrier-16400?page=4
 
ASBM Anti Ship Ballistic Missile is really a threat to larger Ships and Cariers
 
A few thoughts on long range strike capability of US:

1. Combat range of F/A-18E Super Hornet
  • Combat radius: 390 nmi (449 mi, 722 km) for interdiction mission
  • Range: 1,275 nmi (2,346 km) clean plus two AIM-9s
  • Ferry range: 1,800 nmi (2,070 mi, 3,330 km)
  • Up to four LRASM antiship missiles
For F-35A (which has longer range than Marine F-35B but shorter range than Navy F-35C), this will be:
  • Combat radius:
    • 625 nmi (1,158 km) interdiction mission on internal fuel,
    • 760 nmi (1,407 km) for internal air to air configuration
  • Range: >1,200 nmi (2,220 km) on internal fuel
The F-35C has the greatest internal fuel capacity of the three F-35 variants. The F-35C carries nearly 20,000 pounds of internal fuel for longer range and better persistence than any other fighter in a combat configuration. And, like the F-35B, the F-35C uses probe and drogue refueling. This allows the Navy to operate its carriers a safe distance from the threat while its fighters reach remote targets.

NOTE THAT THIS IS ON INTERNAL FUEL!
ANY AERIAL REFUELLING CAN (GREATLY) EXTEND THIS RANGE.
THESE RANGES ARE EXCLUSIVE OF STAND-OFF WEAPONS RANGES.

2. Assume a scenario in which the US does not use any bases in e.g. Japan, South Korea, Phillipines. Singapore or Australia, but instead only relies on its bases GUAM and DIEGO GARCIA. Andersen AFB on GUAM is one of four bomber forward operating locations in the US Air Force. The Strategic Air Command began deploying Boeing B-52 Stratofortress bombers and aerial refueling aircraft to the newly completed Diego Garcia airfield facilities in 1987.

Distances from Anderson AFB to
  • Shanghai: 1682 nmi / 1936 mi / 3115 km
  • Hong Kong: 1834 nmi / 2111 mi / 3397 km
  • Hainan: 2023 nmi / 2328 mi / 3747 km
Distance from Diego Garcia Naval Air Station to:
  • Hainan: 2765 nmi / 3182 mi / 5121 km
  • Hong Kong: 3007 nmi / 3461 mi / 5570 km
  • Shanghai: 3623 nmi / 4169 mi / 6710 km
Range of B-52H bomber
  • Combat radius: 3,890 nmi (4,480 mi, 7,210 km)
  • Ferry range: 8,764 nmi (10,145 mi, 16,232 km)
  • 31,500 kg of mixed ordnance (bombs, mines, missiles, in various configurations).
  • B-52 is currently capable of carrying up to 12 JASSMs on its wing pylons. Integration of the CRL (Conventional Rotary Launcher) in the internal weapons bay could add an additional 8 missiles to the aircraft's weapons loadout, for a total of 20 JASSM (or LRASM)
Range of B-1B bomber
  • Combat radius: 2,993 nmi (3,444 mi; 5,543 km)
  • Range: 5,100 nmi (5,900 mi; 9,400 km)
  • 6 external hardpoints for 23,000 kg of ordnance and 3 internal bomb bays for 34,000 kg of ordnance. Capacity to carry 24 LRASM antiship missiles or JASSM.
Range of B-2A Block 30 stealth bomber
  • Range: 6,000 nmi (6,900 mi; 11,100 km)
  • 2 internal bays for 18,000 kg ordnance and payload; maximum estimated limit is 23,000 kg
  • Capable of carrying 16 (2x8) JSOW, LRASM.
NOTE THAT THIS IS ON INTERNAL FUEL!
ANY AERIAL REFUELLING CAN (GREATLY) EXTEND THIS RANGE.
THESE RANGES ARE EXCLUSIVE OF STAND-OFF WEAPONS RANGES.

3. Standoff weapons:

AGM-154 Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW) glide weapon
Aircraft Compatibility:
  • Navy: F/A-18C/D, F/A-18E/F
  • Air Force: F-16 Block 40/50, B-1B, B-2A, B-52H, F-15E, F-35A
Operational range:
  • low altitude release: 22 kilometres (12 nmi)
  • high altitude release: 130 kilometres (70 nmi)
Introduction of powered JSOW-ER will increase max. range from 130 to 560 kilometres (70 to 300 nmi)

AGM-158 Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile (JASSM) stealthy cruise missile
Aircraft compatibility:
  • Air force: B-1B, B-2A, B-52H, F-15E, F-16 (all already integrated),
  • Navy: F/A-18C/D, F/A-18E/F (already integrated),
  • Potential: F-35 (tri-service)
Operational range
  • 370+ km (230 mi, 200 nmi) [JASSM]
  • 1000+ km (620 mi, 540 nmi) [JASSM-ER]
LRASM, a JAASM-ER based antiship missile.
  • Aircraft compatability: same as AGM-158 JASSM
  • DARPA states its range is "greater than 200 nautical miles (370 km; 230 mi).", the same as JASSM. Although the LRASM is based on the longer range JASSM-ER, which has a range of 500 nmi (930 km; 580 mi), the addition of the antiship sensor and other features for antiship attack will somewhat decrease that range. It is therefor conservatively estimated that the LRASM has a range of 300 nmi (560 km; 350 mi), the same as powered JSOW-ER.
  • Air-launch aside, LRASM is compatible with (has been fired from) MK41 VLS. Just as LRASM was quickly developed from JASSM-ER, it should not be to complicated or timeconsuming to produce a Mk41 compatible JASSM-ER land attack version
  • Some naval advisors have proposed increasing the LRASM's capabilities to serve dual functions as a ship-based land attack weapon in addition to anti-ship roles. By reducing the size of its 1,000 lb (450 kg) warhead to increase range from some 300 mi (480 km) to 1,000 mi (1,600 km), the missile would still be powerful enough destroy or disable warships while having the reach to hit inland targets. With the proper guidance system, a single missile would increase the Navy's flexibility rather than needing two missiles specialized for different roles
NOT COUNTING HARPOON-ER OR TOMAHAWK, (ANTISHIP) STAND-OFF WEAPONS CAPABLITY IS IN PRINCIPLE SUPERIOR TO YJ-18.

4. Consider a scenario in which the US does uses ground forces in any bases in e.g. Japan, South Korea, Phillipines. Singapore or Australia. In October 2016, it was revealed that the 300km ATACMS missile (launched from tracked MLRS and wheeled HIMARS vehicles) would be upgraded with an existing seeker to enable it to strike moving targets on land and at sea. Not counting Harpoon, Harpoon-ER, LRASM, Tomahawk antiship weapons on ships or aircraft, this gives US army and marine units a potent anti-ship weapon, that can easily be relocated to small, forward area positions and could quickly be available in large numbers. This could be used not only by own forces, but also by allied forces equipped with MLRS/HIMARS. ATACMS is a tactical ballistic missiles. A "mini-DF21D"-version would be hard to counter and would limit the freedom of movement of opponent ships near shore significantly. Not to mention that the US will deploy a 500km follow-on to ATACMS around 2021-2022 (see item 5) and this too could be given an antiship capability.

5. DF-21D

How far DF-21D could strike depends on where it is places. If on some of the artificial islands in SCS, that pushes the ”more than nine hundred statute miles from China’s shorelines"-range farther out (Hainan - Spratly's: 836 mi / 1345 km). However, that could also make these more vulnerable to US strike e.g. from the air from Clark AFB (Luzon, Philippines) or ground (longer range future versions of MLRS launched ATACMS missiles).

Specifically: In March 2016, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Raytheon announced they would offer a missile to meet the U.S. Army's Long-Range Precision Fires (LRPF) requirement to replace the ATACMS. The missile will use advanced propulsion to fly faster and further, out to 500 kilometres (310 mi) (limited by the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty), while also being thinner and sleeker, increasing loadout to two per pod, doubling the number able to be carried by M270 MLRS and M142 HIMARS launchers. One contractor is to be downselected in 2018-19 to begin production in 2021-22
Note: Brunei - Spratley Isles = 337.16 miles / 542.61 km.

F-15E (unrefuelled) combat radius: 790 mi (687 nmi, 1,270 km)
Note: Clark afb - Spratley Isles = 757.7 miles / 1219.4 km

Should China seek to protect their DF-21Ds (and others) from strike, that means they won't be directly on the Chinese coastline, but likely more land inward. Not only does that mean no forward eployment but also this reduces the ”more than nine hundred statute miles from China’s shorelines"-range, and the more the farther you go land-inward.

And even then, these may remain vulnerable to air-strike.

us-military-west-pacific-graphic.jpg


Current basing
Chang_-_13.03.26-Pacific-Bases-Tiny.gif

http://www.fpri.org/article/2013/04...t-and-its-military-bases-in-the-asia-pacific/

Assumed back-up
SR-military-power-index-2015-tyranny-of-distance-map.png

http://index.heritage.org/military/2015/chapter/op-environment/asia/

BUT: who says the US needs to come (solely) from the WEST?
diego-garcia.jpg


US basing options
aBQuH2g.png
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom