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CHINAS
MATURING NAVY
By Rear Admiral Eric A. McVadon
U.S. Navy (Retired)
Naval
War College Review,
Spring 2006, Vol. 59, No. 2
USA
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Bureau Chief
USA
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
May 22, 2006
The East Asia
security environment in which China is emerging demands that the
matter of a maturing Chinese navy be put in a political context.
Tension across the Taiwan Strait has recently relaxed. In Beijing,
the leaders of economically successful and internationally active
China do not want to jeopardize the nations prospects for
a bright future by initiating military conflict with Taiwan and
the United Statesquite the contrary. In Taipei, despite profound
disagreement with Beijing and a major stir in domestic politics,
a cautious posture in relations with Beijing now prevails. So, remarkably,
amid deep, persistent, and mutual distrust, the current prospects
for avoiding conflict across the Taiwan Strait are good. Well-informed
Chinese officials and prestigious Americans who have had exchanges
with senior Chinese leaders confirm the relaxed circumstances and
express the conviction that Beijing is confident about the situation
as Chinese leaders see it developing and that Taiwan, again content
with the status quo, will remain measured in its actions. War across
the Taiwan Strait is not looming.
Nevertheless,
Beijing is, by modernizing its military, ensuring that things will
not go awry in Taiwan, that its policy of intimidation continues
to work. The indisputable reality is that this militarythe
Peoples Liberation Army (or PLA), and particularly its naval
component, the PLA Navy (or PLAN)is growing greatly in capability;
further, it is a growing concern to defense and naval leaders in
Washington, D.C., and other capitals, including Tokyo and Taipei.
In a time of American preoccupation with the global war on terrorism,
it is appropriate to draw attention to the crucial features of this
modernization of components of the PLA. Beijing, if the Taiwan
problem were to suffer a dramatic reversal, would have available
an impressive force acquired for this purpose. If that force were
effectively deployed, it would be sufficient in terms of hardware
to undertake a two-pronged, PLA Navyled campaign, with a big
maritime component, against Taiwan and U.S. forces in a fashion
that could be termed jointness with Chinese characteristics.
A MILITARY
TO DEFEND AND DETER
When pressed
on the subject, Chinese officials began some months ago to deliver
both publicly and privately (to the author and undoubtedly many
others) the consistent message that the military budget is not excessive,
manpower is shrinking, and the newly modernized PLA is not a threat.1
Chinese characterize the PLA instead as a deterrent forceas
were U.S. forces during the Cold War, they are quick to remind.
When pressed further, they accept unabashedly the retort that the
modernization surge is, so far, narrowly focused on the Taiwan contingency.
It is directed to deterring Taiwans movement toward independence,
which they consider the top threat to Chinese sovereignty,
and to curbing the ability of the United States to intervene rapidly
and effectively were China compelled, as Beijing perceives it, to
use military force against Taiwan.2
So the concern
is that hard-liners in Beijing, obsessed by the Taiwan problem,
might not allow prudence to prevail in decision making in a crisis
and, consequently, could order the use of military force because
of what they perceive as intolerable splittist conduct
by Taipei. In evaluating the risks of an imprudent decision by Beijing,
it might be asked rhetorically whether the current Chinese Communist
Party is capable of as bad a choice in a future Taiwan crisis as
most observers think the party made with the Great Leap Forward,
the Cultural Revolution, and the actions in 1989 now referred to
simply as Tiananmen. Some observers increasingly find
reason to be optimistic, but it is hard to offer unqualified assurance
that Beijing could not again make a very bad decision.
It is the result
of decisions obviously made several years ago that a new, modern,
and much more capable PLA Navy has, along with the Air Force and
2nd Artillery Corps (the ballistic- and long-range-cruise-missile
force), been acquired and deployed. A stunning modernization effort
continues. Regardless of how Beijings intentions are viewed,
the surge in PLA modernization has radically changed the military
situation for Taiwan. Taipei is more than ever forced to look to
Washington to cope with this more advanced, capable PLA, with the
strategic depth of huge China behind it.
Moreover, the
PLA now hopes to bring to reality concepts its strategists have
written about, such as how an inferior force can prevail against
a superior opponentthat is, China versus the United States.
Specifically, the critical aspects of a new navy and the highly
significant synergies that may develop between it and the missile
and air forces warrant full attention, because they are directed
specifically at deterring, delaying, or complicating timely and
effective American access and intervention. U.S. forces must be
able, should the Taiwan pot boil over, to turn the tables and deter
Beijing from using its proclaimed deterrent forcesor to ensure
a favorable outcome if mutual deterrence fails. The ultimate American
goal, however, should be to make the chances of conflict even less
than they are. Understanding the important developments described
here seems a necessary step toward that goal.
STARTING
WITH QUESTIONS
The following
questions and answers may be an unusual way to begin probing the
specific naval aspects of the issue, but they focus on an often
neglected, but arguably the most surprising, single PLAN acquisition
programits bold move to build quickly a modern nuclear submarine
force despite its troubled past in this arena. These incisive questionsposed
to the author in 2005 by experts on the Chinese submarine forceare
especially useful in that they take the PLAs Taiwan obsession
fully into account but also look beyond. They reveal the layers
of complexity and uncertainty inherent in the very rapid and impressive
modernization of the PLA Navya navy that, it is worth emphasizing,
is arguably the only one in todays world that the U.S. Navy
must deter or be able to defeat, but also a navy that under different
circumstances could become a high-seas partner.
How mature
is Chinas navy? Does the PLAN have the requisite human capital,
organizational practices, and exercise regimen to become a world-
class fleet? The PLAN is most nearly mature with respect to platforms
and weapons but, approximately in the order listed, progressively
less so in human capital, organizational practices, and exercise
regimen. It is working to become better in each.
Are nuclear
submarines a good fit for Chinas emerging naval strategy?
Will the balance of forces (i.e., nuclear versus diesel submarines)
change in the future? The currently emerging balance is a good fit,
especially vis-à-vis Chinas current set of potential
adversaries. If the Taiwan problem were eliminated somehow, a shift
toward nuclear submarines to protect more distant sea- lanes would
be a logical option. This makes the PLAN nuclear submarine program
a possible bellwether for future naval policy more generally.
What are the
trends in undersea warfare and antisubmarine warfare (ASW) in the
western Pacific region? The superiority of the U.S. nuclear submarine
force will continue; however, the Chinese are apparently developing
ballistic missiles with maneuvering warheads and terminal seekers
to hit ships at sea. This capability to lob numerous accurate ballistic
missile warheads high over the heads of all defenders could effectively
circumvent the anticipated quiet and capable U.S. nuclear attack
submarines. The PLAN has previously seen these submarines as all
but impossible to penetrate with its own submarines (or surface
ships) to reach the carriers and cruisers it wants to disable. Despite
the PLANs ineptitude at antisubmarine warfare, short of a
(plausible) major breakthrough, the trend in submarine/ASW competition
is going Chinas way: the PLANs submarine numbers and
diversity trump, or at least could saturate, likely ASW opposition
for the foreseeable future, especially in case of the short war
Beijing contemplates. With respect to Taiwans ASW capability
(almost an oxymoron now), the Republic of China (ROC) Navy would
still have to learn to use its P-3C antisubmarine patrol aircraft
after getting them; its prospective new submarine force of eight
diesel submarines, if approved for acquisition (as currently seems
unlikely), would be a decade or more from operational status and
even then inadequate for antisubmarine warfare against what would
by then have become a remarkably numerous, diverse, and advanced
PLAN submarine force.
What strategic
dilemmas might Washington encounter as a result of Chinas
new nuclear submarine force? Beijings smug confidence that
Washington must always keep in mind Chinas status as a nuclear
power will be reinforced if the PLAN is successful with its ongoing
program to build several modern Jin-class (Project 094) nuclear-powered
ballistic-missile submarines (SSBNs). Its sequential construction
of Shang-class (Project 093) nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSNs)
adds the component of reach (range and speed) to the existing qualities
of numbers of its nuclear and conventional submarines, as well as
quietness for a growing portion of that force and potency of weapons
for a similar portionespecially for the new Kilo-class diesel
submarines from Russia, with their long-range, supersonic, sea-skimming
antiship cruise missiles (ASCMs). A new PLAN with these
new nuclear-powered submarines and stunning array of other new and
modern platforms and weapons is highly likely to view itself in
a different strategic light, as yet unrevealed, than has the old
PLAN.
A MATURING
BUT STILL ADOLESCENT NAVY
Harking back
to the title of this article, the PLA Navy might best be described
as an adolescent rather than mature navy, with the caution that
adolescents can exhibit qualities across the range from juvenile
to adult, often commit crimes that warrant treatment as adults,
and mature unpredictably. To extend the adolescence analogy a bit
more, the PLAN is growing remarkably in size and strength, even
bulking up (in the American vernacular); all observers
remark how it has grown since the last time they saw it.3
Simply fielding
more modern units does not make the PLAN a truly modern operational
force. The limits on how Chinas and the navys leaders
are able to employ their new capabilities represent significant
shortcomings, and success in the effort to overcome them is far
from assured. Put another way, the PLAN has matured remarkably insofar
as acquiring platforms and equipment (ships, submarines, aircraft,
radars, and so on) and weapons (antiship cruise missiles, air defense
missiles, torpedoes, and the like) is concerned, but this new
PLA Navy has not matured fully in exercising its forces and
developing the command and control capabilities, coordination means,
and intelligence and targeting support needed to make that force
fully operationalespecially in comparison with its most important
and most capable potential adversary, the U.S. Navy.4
Better officers
are on the way upif they make it. The PLAN recognizes that
to conduct complex joint operations, exercise greatly enhanced command
and control, and effectively employ modern weapons it needs a better-educated,
more worldly officer corps, and it is striving to do that, or so
it says.5 PLAN officers are taking more prominent positions in institutions
that do strategic thinking; for example, in two recent firsts for
naval officers, Admiral Zhang Dingfa headed the Academy of Military
Science (he now serves as the commander of the PLAN), and Rear Admiral
Yang Yi is still director of the Institute of Strategic Studies
at the National Defense University in Beijing. The PLA Navy seeks
officers educated in first-rate civilian universities.6 The emphasis,
however, appears to be on specific technical and scientific education;7
this approach neglects, it seems, the parallel need for specialists
in operations, security issues, strategic studies, and international
affairs.8
Details aside,
an important and yet unanswered question is whether the PLA Navy
wants officers better educated or considers them better Red. That
is, will competent, forward-thinking officers be selected for flag
rank, or will party loyalty and personal connections continue to
prevail as the paramount selection criteria?9 This author has lectured
and conferred at the National Defense University and other PLA institutions
on several occasions at which junior officers asked all the questions
and did all the talking while flag and general officers who were
students remained silentat least in part, it appeared, for
fear of being outshone in these lively and insightful discussions.
It would seem that at some point the demands of a modern PLA will
force the promotion of more of the officers who have all the intelligent
questions and original thoughts.
Organization
is improving, but maybe not yet enough. The PLA Navy structure has
been streamlined: naval aviation no longer stands alone as though
an almost separate service; closer ties have been established with
the PLANs marine corps; and there are fewer layers in the
chain of command.10 Nevertheless, the author has observed and been
told, there is still much deadwood at the top: individuals in green
uniforms with two or more stars on their shoulders (PLA ground-force
generals) who persist in treating the PLAN as mostly an adjunct
to the army, and senior officers who, through lack of vision, fail
to move decisively toward true joint operations. These generals
represent obstacles at a time when real coordination with the 2nd
Artillery Corps and the PLA Air Force would lead to enormous advances
in the ability to polish off Taiwan, threaten American intervention
capabilities, and keep Japan off balance.
Chinas
navy is still failing to conduct exercises needed to develop its
potential capability. It continues to steam in the littoral for
the most part. However, the PLAN aspires to, and is erratically
striving to conduct, training and exercises in more distant waters;
to make its training more like combat; to challenge itself in exercises
with active, maneuvering opposition forces; and otherwise to add
realism to its training and exercise activity. It has even been
so bold as to engage, in August 2005, in a major multiphased exercise
with the Russian Navy, a notable advance beyond the minor, very
basic exercises it has conducted with the French, British, Australian,
Pakistani, and Indian navies in recent years.11 A few years ago
the PLAN would not have participated in such exercises at all, fearing
not only prying (as well as spying) but embarrassment, that its
shortcomings and backwardness would be revealed. Chinese naval leaders
now seem sufficiently confident in their crews to seek international
partners for exercises. (It will be interesting to see if several
unflattering post-exercise Russian media reports rejuvenate concerns
that bilateral exercises lead to ridicule and embarrassment.)12
Still, the import
of the Russian-Chinese exercise should not be overstated. It was
initially described by many as preparation for countering U.S. forces
in the region. As later and more accurately described, however,
it primarily demonstrated that Sino-Russian bilateral relations
are strong, especially military-to-military relations and arms sales.
The exercise itself, held in waters just off the Shandong Peninsula,
was hardly a simulation of access denial against approaching U.S.
forces. Its significance in that respect would seem to be less direct.
The fact that it was held at all suggests that the Russians are
more likely than we might have surmised to provide logistic and
possibly intelligence supportspecifically, to offer to resupply
missiles and spare parts for the key Russian weapon systems that
China would employ in combat with Taiwan and the United States.13
If it would
be exaggeration, then, to assess this exercise as a sign of emergence
as a fully mature force, the PLAN is creeping toward real blue-water
exercises with composite task forces including surface combatants,
submarines, and aviation. So far, only in occasional and isolated
distant submarine transits does it approximate the task of confronting
an enemy, the U.S. Navy, that it might need to keep at arms
length, many hundreds of miles from the Chinese coast.14 In short,
the PLAN is not visibly conducting exercises, alone or with other
services, that rehearse confrontation with approaching U.S. Navy
forces. The United States should be alert to such a development
with this new force, a force designed to have the capabilities that
could make such operations feasible.
ATTACKS FROM
SEVERAL AXES
A new aspect
of budding maturity, what could facetiously be termed socialization,
is looming and demands attentionthe prospect that the PLAN
and the 2nd Artillery Corps could (and should) join hands to bolster
the nations capability to attack Taiwan and pose a significantly
greater and more diverse threat to the ability of the United States
to intervene in the region. The greatly increased number and highly
improved accuracy of Chinas medium- and short-range ballistic
missiles (MRBMs and SRBMs), plus strategic and technical writings,
suggest strongly that senior Chinese military leaders have recognized
the enhancement of naval capabilities that would result from support
by ballistic and land-attack cruise missiles. Chinas MRBMs
(the DF-21C) and SRBMs (DF-15 and -11), with conventional warheads,
have capabilities well beyond the psychological intimidation of
Taiwan.15 Prospective synergies stem from the ability of these potent
missile arsenals to suppress Taiwans offensive and defensive
air power, support amphibious and airborne assaults on the island,
strike American bases in the region, and possibly damage heavily
Taiwanese naval forces before they could leave port.
However, the
most important aspect of the increasing ballistic-missile threat
is the prospect that within a few years China may be able seriously
to threaten not only American land bases but also carrier strike
groups, with maneuvering reentry vehicles (MaRVs).16 MaRVed missiles,
with conventional warheads, would maneuver both to enhance warhead
survival (defeat missile defenses) and home on mobile (or stationary)
targets.17 The implications for the PLAN of this prospective 2nd
Artillery capability are, of course, profound; they include the
ability to degrade U.S. air and missile defenses (including the
Aegis systems and carrier flight decks). That would allow follow-on
attacks by layered, diverse, and appropriately redundant PLAN submarine,
air, and surface forces firing large numbers of very modern and
capable ASCMs, torpedoes, and even their guns if the earlier attacks
suppress most defenses.18 This and what follows are in clear outline
the sort of threat the PLA and PLA Navy wish to pose to U.S. Navy
forces. The precisely focused force the Chinese have built and what
they have written about its use leave no doubt about the conceptalthough
there are grave doubts about their ability to conduct it.
Whether, or
how soon, the ballistic-missile threat becomes a factor in the ability
of the PLAN to deter, confuse, and delay or, alternatively, confront
approaching U.S. Navy forces, the ability to launch lethal antiship-cruise-missile
attacks is an area where the PLAN is already near or at maturityeven
if the targeting of American forces at which to launch them has
not reached a mature state. The PLAN became early a cruise-missile
navy, as a way of overcoming other deficiencies. Now it must be
described as a modern cruise-missile navy, at least with respect
to the platforms and lethal, evasive missiles it is deploying.19
The PLANs four newest classes of submarines, armed with potent
ASCMs, fall just below MaRVed ballistic missiles in the hierarchy
of potential or emerging threats to U.S. forces.
At the top of
the submarine component of the overall threat are the eight new
Kilo-class diesel-electric submarines from Russia that are now being
successively delivered to China. These submarines threaten carrier
strike groups through their ability to launch, while submerged over
a hundred miles away, the SS-N-27B/Sizzler antiship cruise missile.20
After a subsonic flight to the target area, the SS-N-27B makes a
supersonic, sea-skimming, evasive attack.21 It is described by its
marketers and others as part of the best family of cruise missiles
in the world and, in the opinion of some, as able to defeat the
U.S. Aegis air- and missile-defense system that is central to the
defense of carrier strike groups.22
Shang-class
(Type 093) SSNs are possible partners for the new Kilos. The surprisingly
rapid construction of successive units in this new class of nuclear-powered
attack submarine implies special utility in a Taiwan contingency.
The Shangs could, if they prove sufficiently quiet and fast and
are properly equipped with sensors, be part of the net by which
the PLAN locates and identifies approaching U.S. carrier strike
groups.23 If used this way, they could be part of a matrix composed
of such detection and reporting means as satellites, merchant ships,
and even fishing boats with satellite phones.
Having served
as part of the matrix that detects targets for the ballistic missiles
and Kilos, the Shangs could then join with the Song- and Yuan-class
nonnuclear submarines (SSs) in attacks against selected U.S. forces
that have, as expected in the sequenced PLA attack concept, suffered
by that point significant degradation of their air and missile defenses.24
These three classes of submarines could carry out, from several
attack axes, submerged launches of large salvoes of subsonic, but
still very capable, ASCMs. Of course, further follow-on attacks
by torpedoes cannot be discounted if they appear to be needed.
Chinas
other new nuclear-powered submarine program, the Jin-class (Project
094) ballistic-missile submarine, is primarily a part of Chinas
strategic deterrent, but it will necessarily play a role as backdrop
for this Taiwan scenario.25 As with Chinas modernized and
augmented land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, Beijing
can act more confidently in bold undertakings vis-à-vis the
United States when its strategic forces are more secure. With the
Jins, Beijing is adding a layer of insurance that American missile
defenses could be saturatedand that Washington would know
it. Washington, of course, would have to take into account the fact
that it is dealing with a capable nuclear power whose missiles have
become very mobile and hard to detect.
A DAUNTING
ASW CHALLENGE
The success
of the described PLAN submarine attacks using submerged-launch antiship
cruise missiles depends to some degree on thwarting or coping with
U.S. antisubmarine warfare capabilities, primarily aircraft (P-3Cs
and to a lesser extent shipborne helicopters) and SSNs. One method
by which the Chinese might complicate the ASW picture for the Americans
is to use large numbers of submarines, including the score or more
older submarinesHan-class SSNs and Romeo- and Ming-class SSswhich
may be noisy but cannot be ignored. In round numbers, the PLAN might,
in a campaign where it has chosen the time to ready the crews and
initiate operations, be able to deploy more than twenty modern SSNs
and SSs and roughly the same number of older submarines.26 The long
range of the ASCMs carried by the new Kilos means that those submarines
need not come within a hundred miles of the target ships, if targeting
information can be obtained remotelygreatly expanding the
areas that American SSNs and P-3Cs would have to search. The speed
and practically unlimited underwater endurance of the new Shang
SSNs could allow them to close targets promptly to launch their
shorter-range ASCMs after the initial attacks by longer-range missiles
have degraded defenses.
The role of
Taiwan in antisubmarine warfare deserves some attention. Taiwans
current ASW capability is minimal. That capability might improve
in the foreseeable future were Taiwan to obtain from the United
States the much-discussed P-3Cs, but that will depend on how seriously
the ROC Navy pursues the demanding task of learning how to do antisubmarine
warfare with that aircraft. If it does that well, Taiwans
P-3Cs might offer a measure of help in the big ASW problem that
the PLAN could create in the East China Sea and beyond.27 The Japanese
Maritime Self-Defense Force would offer another measure of assistance,
if Tokyo were to make a political decision to involve its forces
in that way. All this said, Chinas growing and improving submarine
fleet has outpaced U.S., Japanese, and Taiwanese ASW in the difficult
littoral waters of the region, which generally favor submarines
seeking to escape detection.28 Open-ocean areas may be a slightly
riskier proposition for the PLANs submarines, unless they
actually achieve the elusive new levels of stealth to which China
aspires.
The previously
described antisurface-warfare roles seem the most likely ones for
the PLANs new Shangs. It does not seem likely that the PLAN,
inexperienced compared to the U.S. Navy in undersea warfare, would
use its few new SSNsprecious to the Chinese but almost certainly
not comparable to American SSNs in capability and stealthin
an effort to strip the carrier groups of their submarine protection.
So far, China has conceded that aspect of the game to the United
States and chosen to avoid dueling with the superior American submarines.
By electing to develop a land-based ballistic-missile threat against
ships at sea, China is pursuing a path that could keep U.S. submarines
from blocking a critical initial attack on carrier strike groups.
If in the event the ballistic-missile concept is not usable or fails
in execution, the new Kilos with the SS-N-27B, the many other submarines
with ASCMs, and the increasingly capable PLA naval air force B-6s,
FB-7s, and Su-30MK2s (to be mentioned in more detail later) provide
other alternatives that largely avoid American underwater-warfare
superiority. The point is that as the Shangs are introduced into
the fleet, it seems unlikely that they will be expected to take
on American SSNs directly.
ENOUGH TO
MAKE WASHINGTON PAUSE?
The intensity
and persistence of PLAN attacks on U.S. Navy forces could well be
affected by Beijings perception of the fragility of a government
on Taiwan subjected to a major assault from everything from ballistic
missiles to aircraft to special forcesand much more. It should
be remembered that the primary purpose of denying or delaying access
by U.S. forces would be to convince Taipei that waiting for help
is futile, that capitulation and negotiationon Beijings
termsare the only reasonable option. Success against U.S.
forces is, therefore, important largely for its effect on Taipeis
will to fight on. Success in such conflict would be sweetest for
the PLA if the United States never became actively involved, concern
about the capabilities of a modernized Chinese force having led
American leaders to delay or withhold carrier strike groups.
Returning from
strategic considerations to the fight itself, were one to occur,
the Chinese can be expected next to deliver air-launched antiship
cruise missiles once the air defenses of the U.S. strike groups,
and possibly regional bases as well, are degraded. So this layer
in the assault might be the PLA Navy Air Force, attacking several
hundred miles out to sea from China (in some cases possibly much
farther) with potent new air-launched ASCMs fired from new aircraft
from Russia (the Su-30MK2) and indigenous long-range B-6s (a new
version with new missiles) and FB-7 maritime interdiction aircraft,
also with new ASCMs.29 (Note how many times the word new appeared,
correctly, in that sentence.) Some PLA Air Force aircraft have similar
capabilities. At a minimum, the U.S. Navy would have to be concerned
about vulnerability to such an attack and, if it had, indeed, sustained
damage, might feel it had to retreat. Beijing would make sure that
such a development was not lost on Taipeiand we are seeking
here to understand more fully how Beijing envisions a conflict with
its modernized forces, not necessarily the reality.
Surface combatants
would be a final layer if a supposedly casualty-averse Washington
and teetering Taipei have not yet taken the point. Cleanup attacks
might in such a case be intended, with very capable ASCMs from the
several new or upgraded classes of destroyers and frigates. These
warships are led, with respect to lethal firepower, by Russian Sovremennyys
(soon to increase from two to four) with supersonic, very evasive
SS-N-22s.30 China has built or is building enough new and modernized
destroyers and frigates to form several modern surface action groups,
each capable of long-range attacks with almost equally lethal, although
subsonic, ASCMs. Alsoand here it is finally beginning to overcome
a long-standing shortcomingthe PLA Navy is on the way to acquiring
good fleet air defenses using surface-to-air missile systems.31
To capture succinctly
the scope of the modernization of the surface combatant force, it
can be said that the Chinese are now building and dramatically upgrading
more classes of modern destroyers and frigates (these combatants
clearly outmatch those of Taiwan) than previous rates suggested
they might acquire ships in this decade.32
The question
that cannot now be answered is whether such a visible and slow-moving
force, even with dramatically improved air defense, could actually
engage even a damaged U.S. force and not be subject to devastating
attack by other American strike forces. There are, however, broader
uncertainties for the PLAN. As noted, the concepts outlined above
emerge from the force Beijing is building and from PLA doctrinal
and other writing. Beijing has made hard decisions and executed
expensive programs in the ongoing surge in the modernization of
the PLA, with great emphasis on naval, air, and missile forces for
such operations as described. But surveillance and targeting support
will be needed if this force is to deter or confront American intervention
efforts. To that end, it appears that China is making significant
efforts to gain a varied capability from space, land, sea (including
undersea), and air to locate, identify, track, and target naval
forces.33 China is lagging in this arenareal success in the
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) arena could
take a decadebut one might make a guess that some rudimentary,
if not reliable and consistent, capability could be cobbled together
within a couple of years. In other words, there is impending danger
that U.S. ships could be detected and effectively targeted. At least
equally important is whether China will be able to coordinate, command,
and control such operationsthat is, what of the C4* to go
with the ISR? The PLAN, although now more realistic and somewhat
bolder in its training and exercises, as mentioned above, has not,
for example, touted or otherwise given evidence of rehearsals of
encounters with simulated carrier strike groups hundreds of miles
east of China, as it might do as part of a deterrence scheme.
There is, as
described, no doubt about the acquisition of modern platforms and
threatening weapons, but there remains puzzlement as to whether
and how promptly the PLA Navy and the other crucial components of
the PLA will make all this capability truly operational. There is,
nevertheless, an additional serious corollary as to whether Beijing
would feel compelled in some circumstance to initiate hostilities
against Taiwan and to confront U.S. forces even if preparations
were short of optimal. It is hard to relax with respect to Beijing
and Taiwan, even if we think Chinese command and control is not
up to the task.
This all adds
up to a complex planning and execution challenge for an inexperienced
PLA. In the scenario depicted above, it would be conducting two
major campaigns simultaneously: one to subdue Taiwan and the other
to delay effective American intervention. The campaign against Taiwan
would likely include initial ballistic-missile and land-attack cruise-missile
attacks; special forces, fifth-column sabotage, and other such actions;
information operations; major air attacks; and amphibious and airborne
assaults to secure lodgments to allow occupation and control of
Taiwan. The campaign against the United States, in addition to being
preceded by extensive efforts temporarily to cripple American C4ISR,
would, it should be remembered, consist of the described ballistic-
and cruise-missile attacks on carrier strike groups and possibly
regional U.S. bases, submarine attacks using various forms of antiship
cruise missiles, and then selections from such follow-on options
as ASCMs from air or surface forces. This would be an extraordinarily
demanding undertaking against a daunting foe for a PLA leadership
that has no experience in such combat.
The authors
guess is that the PLA would quickly succeed against Taiwan but would
probably falter against U.S. forces, against which it would encounter
surprises, countermeasures, and other capabilities that would likely
cause severe reversals. It must also be remembered, however, both
that Chinas best strategic and military minds are working
on these problems and that Beijing may feel it has to act against
Taiwan regardless of how challenging the prospect may appear. Moreover,
it is unlikely that the leaders of todays modernized PLA would
tell the civilian leadership that their military is not ready. On
the contrary, Beijing and the military have reason to believe that
their forces are of such a nature as to avoid American strengths,
like SSNs and advanced C4ISR, and to make the most of Chinas
strengths, such as its ballistic and cruise missiles and new conventional
and nuclear submarine forces. The United States has the task not
only to deter this modern military that could embolden Chinese leaders
but also, irresistibly yet subtly, to lead those leaders to the
conviction that a decision to attack Taiwan is not in Chinas
interests and would not likely result in reunification.
BEYOND THE
TAIWAN PROBLEM
The PLA, especially
the PLAN, now seems almost wholly, even obsessively, focused on
the Taiwan problem. Two other factors should be taken into account,
however, and already seem to be intruding into Chinese strategic
thinking. First, an emerging China wants to build a military appropriate
to the country that it is becoming. Second, Chinas all-important
national economic growth, which keeps the Communist Party in power,
is dependent on ocean commerce. As the PLA Navy tries to look beyond
Taiwan or to decide what, even now, it should be thinking about
besides that, it sees a long-term capability to secure sea and land
routes for the flow of oil and natural gas, as well as other commodities,
as a leading priority for China.
Will we see
an organic air capability and a shift to more nuclear submarines?
A PLA Navy able to carry out that mission would almost certainly
have some form of organic air, so that it could effectively operate
beyond the range of land-based aircraftfar south in the South
China Sea, the Strait of Malacca, even to the Indian Ocean. Current
shipyard work on the incomplete aircraft carrier Varyag may be the
start of a move in that direction, unlike so many Chinese aircraft-carrier
rumors of past decades.34 Another consideration could be a leaning
toward submarines with greater range, speed, and independence from
land bases. This could mean that nuclear-powered attack submarines,
despite the added cost, might be preferred over diesel-electric
or even air-independent-propulsion submarines.
SSNs are a possible
bellwether of PLAN strategic thinking. China is now building and
buying three classes of nonnuclear submarines: the Kilos, the Songs,
and the Yuans (some speculate about the exact character of the Yuan
propulsion system). These submarines, along with the older Mings
and remaining Romeos, represent a major investment and will almost
certainly constitute a majority of the submarine fleet for the next
fifteen years or more. It will, nevertheless, be worthwhile to keep
an eye on Chinas success with the Shang attack class, to ascertain
whether it will feel the need suggested above for a faster, more
independent force to protect distant sea lanes, and whether an emerging
China will follow the American example and diversify its SSN fleet
to include land-attack cruise-missile capabilities and the ability
to insert special forcesor possibly other, novel capabilities
needed in emerging missions for an emerged China.
Chinas
navy has developed in many remarkable ways, but perhaps the biggest
test of maturity is the bold attempt to leap to a new status in
the prestigious and unforgiving domain of nuclear submarineswhere
it had previously faltered. To a significant degree, the success
or failure of its new nuclear-powered submarines, the Jin-class
ballistic-missile class as well as the Shangs, is likely to determine
future decisions for the Chinese submarine force. The American example
in diversifying its nuclear submarines may also become a factor,
in the form of an example. The outcome for the nuclear submarine
force could set the tone for a navy that either comes to feel that
it ranks with the best or, having tried out for the pros,
finds that once more it has faltered.
In any case,
it is instructive to imagine a particularly intelligent and competent
young Chinese naval officer just beginning his service. That junior
officer must today see the prospect, at least, of a promising career
ahead as a nuclear submariner in a globally capable real navythe
prospect of professional challenge and esteem comparable to that
of an American counterpart. That in itself is a remarkable and telling
change from a few years ago, when serving on troubled Chinese nuclear
submarines was thought by some to be as much a joke as a job. Such
success as the Chinese submarine force attains would tend to be
infectious and to bolster the professionalism of other components
of the modern PLAN, where newfound pride is thriving as well. The
PLA Navy is not fully mature, but it has established its potential
for that status in the air, on the sea, and, conspicuously, under
the sea.
NOTES
This article is adapted from a paper delivered at the Naval War
Colleges Chinas New Nuclear Submarine Fleet
Research Symposium, 2627 October 2005.
1. Previously, the author had been told privately that the PLA was
surging in capability because it finally had the funds from Beijing,
the technologies and assistance from Moscow, and the realization
that Washington was not going to accept Beijings position
on Taiwan. Prominent in the recent public exchange was the Chinese
response to three events: first, Secretary of Defense Rumsfelds
complaints about the large PLA budget, made at a conference sponsored
by the International Institute for Strategic Studies in Singapore
on 4 June 2005; second, his similar comments in Beijing in October
2005; and third, the 2005 annual Department of Defense report to
the Congress on PRC military power. Typical of the strongly stated
disagreement were the widely noted immediate objection expressed
by Cui Tiankai, top Chinese representative at the Singapore conference,
and the sharp retort of Vice Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi, the former
Chinese ambassador in Washington, as quoted in the Washington Post
on 21 July 2005, p. A24. He chastised the United States for improper
comments about Chinas defensive national defense policy and
measures and called the buildup normal national defense
building. Yang asserted that most of the new spending went
for improving living conditions for troops, noting, rather disingenuously,
that the military also updated some weapons equipment.
2. On 4 December 2005, while preparing this article, the author
met with two longtime Chinese colleagues, a diplomat (senior foreign
service officer) and a senior PLA Navy officer, both of them well
informed and well connected. They agreed with each other (and unknowingly
with American observers) that conflict with Taiwan and the United
States was unlikely and that cross-Strait relations were relaxed.
The diplomats said that Beijings relaxed attitude stemmed
in part from recently enhanced confidence with respect to political
developments in Taipei favorable to Beijing and prospects for eventual
peaceful resolution. They offered no apology or explanation for
the fact that PLA modernization is focused on the Taiwan issue;
both seemed to consider the unprecedented military buildup simply
appropriately responsive to the task of deterring and being able
to cope with Chinas most important contingencythe Taiwan-U.S.
threat.
3. For a description of this PLA Navy, Air Force, and 2nd Artillery
modernization surge, see the authors testimony on Capitol
Hill on 15 September 2005 before the U.S.-China Economic and Security
Review Commission, available at www.uscc.org or at www.ifpa.org/pdf/mcvadon.pdf.
For an exhaustive but illuminating description by a non-American
source of the PLAN program, see Mikhail Barabanov, Contemporary
Military Shipbuilding in China, Eksport Vooruzheniy, 1 FBIS
CEP20050811949014, August 2005. This piece (perhaps unexpectedly)
is a remarkably accurate and uniquely comprehensive open-source
reference on the recent stunning surge in modernization of the PLAN.
4. U.S. Defense Dept., FY04 Report to Congress on PRC Military Power
(available at www.defenselink.mil/pubs/d20040528PRC.pdf), states
on page 6: China has continued to improve its potential for
joint operations via development of an integrated command and control
network, a new command structure, and improved C4ISR platforms.
As in previous years, Chinas leaders realize that most of
the PLAs C4ISR equipment lags generations behind that of the
West and are encouraging a new generation of researchers, engineers,
and officers to find ways to adapt to the demands of the modern
battlefield. The acquisition of advanced C4ISR technology is one
of the principal objectives of PRC collection activities.
5. David Shambaugh, Modernizing Chinas Military: Progress,
Problems, and Prospects (Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 2002),
pp. 32, 4647. The PLA is still the partys army,
all officers above the rank of senior colonel are party members,
and the CCP still institutionally penetrates the military apparatus.
The rules of the game . . . have changed as a result of several
developments: [among Shambaughs listed developments]Increased
professionalism in the senior officer corps and a concomitant decline
in the promotion of officers with backgrounds as political commissars.
6. Paul H. B. Godwin, Chinas Defense Establishment:
The Hard Lessons of Incomplete Modernization, in The Lessons
of History: The Chinese Peoples Liberation Army at 75, ed.
Laurie Burkitt, Andrew Scobell, and Larry M. Wortzel (Carlisle,
Penna.: U.S. Army War College, Strategic Studies Institute, July
2003), p. 33. Godwin states: Officer recruitment has been
changed to an emphasis on college graduates rather than selecting
from the ranks of serving enlisted men and women, and advancement
in rank now requires attendance at the appropriate PME schools.
7. Bernard D. Cole, The Organization of the Peoples
Liberation Army Navy (PLAN), in The Peoples Liberation
Army as Organization: Reference Volume v1.0, ed. James C. Mulvenon
and Andrew N. D. Yang (Santa Monica, Calif.: RAND, 2002), p. 476.
The PLAN is emulating the U.S. reserve officer-training corps
(ROTC) programs for producing well-educated, technically oriented
candidate officers.
8. Beijing Xinhua, 17 August 1999, translated in FBIS-CHI-99-0817:
The Chinese navy plans to recruit about 1,000 officers from
non-military universities and colleges yearly beginning this autumn
in an effort to meet its need for command and technical talent.
. . . [these officers] will account for 40 percent of all naval
officers by the year 2010. This was originally cited in Cole,
The Organization of the Peoples Liberation Army Navy
(PLAN), p. 477.
9. Elizabeth Hague, PLA Leadership in Chinas Military
Regions, in Civil-Military Change in China: Elites, Institutes,
and Ideas after the 16th Party Congress, ed. Andrew Scobell and
Larry Wortzel, eds. (Carlisle, Penna.: U.S. Army War College, Strategic
Studies Institute, September 2004), pp. 247, 250. Two extracts from
this chapter illustrate that party loyalty, guanxi (connections),
and a reputation for not rocking the boat remain important in promotion
decisions: Several military region commanders have been promoted
. . . to the national level. . . . [I]n all cases they involve a
candidate . . . valuable for a national-level positioneven
when other factors, such as connections, were a strong factor in
a promotion [emphasis original]. Further, Military leaders
reflect PLA priorities, even in some cases when what the leader
has to offer is continuity rather than new ideas or techniques.
10. The author and another longtime American specialist on the PLAN
were separately told of these organizational changes by knowledgeable
PLAN officers.
11. These exercises with foreign navies consisted of search-and-rescue
drills, communications exercises, and even replenishment alongside
in at least one case; however, conspicuously absent were tactical
operations. The author has been told authoritatively that planned
or proposed exercises with Thailand and other ASEAN countries will
also have the goal of fostering bilateral relations, not of achieving
operational capability.
12. Nikolay Petrov, Moscow and Beijing Did Not Mention Their
Loses [sic] That They Incurred during the Joint Maneuvers,
Moscow Kommersant, FBIS CEP20051013330001, 8 September 2005. The
following FBIS reports contain left-handed compliments and question
PLA competence: Chinese Armys Iron Discipline
Impresses Russian Defense Minister, Moscow RIA-Novosti, CEP20050825002002,
25 August 2005; Russia: Results of Joint Military Exercise
with China Assessed, Moscow Rossiya television, CEP20050927027016,
24 September 2005; Russian TV Looks at Military Cooperation
with China Post-Exercise, Moscow Zvezda television, CEP20050919027182,
19 September 2005.
13. China-Russia: PRC Media on Sino-Russian Military Exercises
Project Image of Converging Interests in Asia, FBIS Feature,
FEA20050831007588, 31 August 2005. This analysis of the August 2005
Russian-Chinese exercise quotes the principal Chinese and Russian
generals involved as saying the exercise represented a major
strategic decision of the Russian and Chinese leaders aimed
at deepening strategic cooperative partnershipa
phrase described by the FBIS analyst as normally used to describe
bilateral relations.
14. Richard Halloran, Chinese Sub Highlights Underseas Rivalries,
Japan Times, 30 November 2004, available at search.japantimes.co.jp/print/opinion/eo2004/eo20041130a1.htm.
15. U.S. Department of Defense, Annual Report to Congress: The Military
Power of the Peoples Republic of China 2005, July 2005, pp.
1213; available at www.defenselink.mil/news/Jul2005/d20050719china.pdf.
On MRBMs, see Mark A. Stokes, Chinese Ballistic Missile Forces
in the Age of Global Missile Defense: Challenges and Responses,
in Chinas Growing Military Power: Perspectives on Security,
Ballistic Missiles, and Conventional Capabilities, ed. Andrew Scobell
and Larry M. Wortzel (Carlisle, Penna.: U.S. Army War College, Strategic
Studies Institute, September 2002), p. 113, available at www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/PUB59.pdf.
The DF-21 family is also called the CSS-5. On SRBMs, see ibid.,
p. 116. The DF-15 and DF-11 families are also called the CSS-6 and
CSS-7, respectively.
16. Stokes, Chinese Ballistic Missile Forces in the Age of
Global Missile Defense, p. 150 note 12.
17. See Eric A. McVadon, Recent Trends in Chinas Military
Modernization, written statement prepared for testimony before the
U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, 15 September
2005, available at www.ifpa.org/pdf/mcvadon.pdf. The information
was derived from many translated Chinese articles during recent
years; sources can be identified for serious researchers.
18. Admiral Lowell E. Jacoby, Director, Defense Intelligence Agency,
Current and Projected National Security Threats to the United States,
statement (excerpted) to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,
24 February 2004, available at www.ransac.org/Official%20Documents/U.S.%20Government/Intelligence
%20Community/492004113202AM.html.
19. See Barabanov, Contemporary Military Shipbuilding in China,
for an open-source catalogue of PLAN modernization efforts.
20. John R. Benedict, The Unraveling and Revitalization of
U.S. Navy Antisubmarine Warfare, Naval War College Review
58, no. 2 (Spring 2005). The recent sale [to China] of eight
additional Project 636 Kilos equipped with wake-homing antiship
torpedoes and submerged-launch 3M54E Klub-S [the SS-N-27B] antiship
cruise missiles is indicative of the transformation of this submarine
force. The Project 636 Kilo is one of the quietest diesel
submarines in the world [quoting the Office of Naval Intelligence];
. . . the Klub-S missile has a 220-kilometer maximum range . . .
and a terminal speed of up to Mach 3. Such a capability represents
a very formidable threat to American and allied surface units
(p. 102).
21. Klub (SS-N-27) ASCM, Barat Rakshak: The Consortium
of Indian Military Websites, 12 September 2004, www.bharat-rakshak.com/navy/Klub.html.
This and several of the following citations from public sources
serve usefully to describe Chinese acquisitions and deployments;
the varied character of these sources also illustrates that reasonably
accurate descriptions of the ongoing PLA modernization are publicly
available. The problem can be culling inaccurate reports; the author
is often able to do so by asking knowledgeable PLA officers and
through active exchanges with other diligent specialists.
22. Russia to Deliver SS-N-27 to China, Chinese Defence
Today, 29 April 2005, available at www.sinodefence.com/news/2005/news29-04-05
.asp.
23. On quietness and sensors, see Zachary Moss, Nuclear Submarines
Worldwide: Current Force Structure and Future Developments,
Bellona Nuclear Naval Vessels, 13 May 2004, www.bellona.no/en/international/russia/navy/northern_fleet/vessels/34070.html.
On employment, see Globalsecurity.org, www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/2005/d20050719china.pdf.
The U.S. Defense Department, in its 2005 Annual Report to the Congress:
The Military Power of the Peoples Republic of China, states
on page 33: China is developing capabilities to achieve local
sea denial, including . . . developing the Type-093 nuclear attack
submarine for missions requiring greater at-sea endurance.
24. Yuan Class Diesel-Electric Submarine, Chinese Defence
Today, available at www.sinodefence.com/navy/sub/yuan.asp. For the
Song class, Type 039 Song Class Diesel-Electric Submarine,
ibid., www.sinodefence.com/navy/sub/039.asp.
25. Jing-Dong Yuan, Chinese Responses to U.S. Missile Defenses:
Implications for Arms Control and Regional Security, Nonproliferation
Review (Spring 2003), available at cns.miis.edu/pubs/npr/vol10/101/101yuan.pdf,
p. 89.
26. This is an estimate based on the authors acquaintance
over fifteen years with the PLAN submarine force and discussions
in recent years with others who have extensive experience concerning
that force.
27. With respect to Taiwans ASW capability and potential,
the author drew on numerous exchanges with ROC naval officers and
think-tankers over many years, including numerous visits to Taiwan.
For judgments on other aspects of the ASW environment, the author
relied on his three decades of ASW experience flying P-2 and P-3
aircraft, the major portion of which was gained with the U.S. Seventh
Fleet in western Pacific waters.
28. Benedict, The Unraveling and Revitalization of U.S. Navy
Antisubmarine Warfare, p. 97 fig. 2, where the ASW situation
for 2003 is described as, Few new ASW sensor & weapon
capabilities fielded to counter diesel subs in littorals.
Also, on pp. 99100, the U.S. Navy vice admiral commanding
Atlantic submarine and ASW forces is quoted as saying, Our
ASW capabilities can best be described as poor or weak, and
the Pacific Fleet commander as warning, We will need greater
ASW capability than we have today. . . . [F]uture technologies are
essential to counter the growing submarine threat.
29. For the Su-30, Charles R. Smith, New Chinese Jets Superior,
Eagle Loses to Flanker, NewsMax.com, 26 May 2004, at www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/5/26/154053
.shtml. This article illustrates that open sources were reporting
this PLA naval air force acquisition and its antiship role soon
after its purchase from Russia was consummated: China is about
to receive 24 advanced Sukhoi Su-30MK2 Flanker fighters from Russia.
. . . The new Chinese fighters are reportedly equipped with enhanced
anti-ship strike capabilities including the Kh-31 Krypton supersonic
anti-ship missile. . . . The PLA Naval Air Corps will deploy the
latest batch of Su-30MK2 fighters. For the B-6, Robert S.
Norris and Hans M. Kristensen, Chinese Nuclear Forces, 2003,
2003 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 59, no. 6 (November/December
2003), pp. 7780, available at www.thebulletin.org/article_nn.php?art_ofn=nd03norris.
Using the Chinese designation for B-6that is, H-6this
article states: Although increasingly obsolete as a modern
strike bomber, the H-6 may gain new life as a platform for Chinas
emerging cruise missile capability. The naval air force has used
the H-6 to carry the C-601/Kraken anti-ship cruise missile for more
than 10 years, and Flight International reported in 2000 that up
to 25 H-6s would be modified to carry four new YJ-63 land-attack
cruise missiles. For the FB-7, see JH-7 [Jianhong Fighter-Bomber]
[FB-7]/FBC-1, Globalsecurity.org, 27 April 2005, www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/china/jh-7.htm:
China reportedly is developing an improved version of the
FB-7. The twin-engine FB-7 is an all-weather, supersonic, medium-range
fighter-bomber with an anti-ship mission. Improvements to the FB-7
likely will include a better radar, night attack avionics, and weapons.
For ASCMs, see Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI), Chinas Cruise
Missile Designations and Characteristics, 26 March 2003, www.nti.org/db/china/mimport.htm.
This material is produced independently for NTI by the Center for
Nonproliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute of International
Studies.
30. Naval Forces, Strategy Page, 20 March 2005, www.strategypage.com/htmw/htsurf/articles/20050320.aspx.
This source states: The primary weapon of the Sovremennyy
is the SS-N-22 Sunburn, a high-speed sea-skimming missile with a
huge 660-pound warhead. The Sunburn is probably the best anti-ship
missile in the world. This article is cited primarily to illustrate
the widespread reputation of the Sunburn missile as extremely lethal
and evasive.
31. Type 052c (Lanzhou Class) Air Defence Missile Destroyer,
Chinese Defence Today, 27 August 2005, available at www.sinodefence
.com/navy/surface/052c.asp: Jiangnan Shipyard started to build
two Type 052C destroyers . . . with more advanced weapon systems
and sensors specifically for fleet air defence role. . . . The most
notable feature is the four-array multifunction phased array radar
(PAR) similar to the U.S. AN/SPY-1 Aegis system. Additionally, the
destroyers are also fitted with the vertical launch system (VLS)
for the indigenous HQ-9 long-range air defence missile system.
32. The U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission annual
report for 2005, chap. 3, sec. 1, based on testimony of expert witnesses,
available at www.uscc.gov/annual _report/2005/chapter3_sec1.pdf,
states: The PLA Navy (PLAN) is engaged in an unprecedented
level of construction and acquisition of major surface combatant
ships. It currently is deploying seven new major ship classes at
one time, building up to two new ships in each class per year. These
include the Project 956 Sovremennyy-class guided-missile destroyer
(DDG); the Type 52B DDG; the Type 52C, Aegis-like DDG; the Type
54 guided-missile frigate.
33. U.S. Defense Dept., FY04 Report to Congress on PRC Military
Power, states on pp. 4344: Acquisition of modern ISR
systems remains a critical aspect of Beijings military modernization.
China is developing its ISR capabilities based on domestic components,
supplemented by foreign technology acquisition and procurement of
complete foreign systems. PLA procurement of new space systems,
AEW [air early warning] aircraft, long-range UAVs [unmanned aerial
vehicles], and over-the-horizon radar will enhance its ability to
detect, monitor, and target naval activity in the western Pacific
Ocean. It appears, from writings on PLA exercises, that this system
currently lacks integration and that a fused, efficient ISR capability
will not be achieved for many years. See also Richard A. Bitzinger,
Come the Revolution: Transforming the Asia-Pacifics
Militaries, Naval War College Review 58, no. 4 (Autumn 2005),
pp. 4243, 46.
34. For the saga of China and aircraft carrier acquisition, see
Ian Storey and You Ji, Chinas Aircraft Carrier Ambitions:
Seeking Truth from Rumors, Naval War College Review 57, no.
1 (Winter 2004).
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