China's Navy Goes Global | Asia Sentinel
Jens Kastner, 21 August 2012
And develops a cruise missile to supplement its seagoing arsenal
China is developing a ship-based cruise missile that has the
capability to attack targets thousands of kilometers inland, snapshots
published by a military enthusiast web site suggest. For the first time,
that would give the People's Liberation Army Navy a weapon comparable
to the US's hugely successful Tomahawk missile.
It is the newest chapter in Beijing's quest to be taken seriously as a
global military power. While China has had land-based cruise missiles
for perhaps a decade, the emergence of the new ship-launched ones, which
are designed to carry out long-distance precision attacks against
targets on land at the lowest risk to its own forces, is an indication
of how far the Chinese has come since Mao Zedong was in charge.
Under Mao, China's navy was concentrated on coastal defense and for the
possible invasion of Taiwan. It wasn't until Chinese military planners
in the late 1990s realized that their rising country could quickly be
brought to its knees by an enemy seeking to choke off the economy's
supply of oil and other raw materials on the high seas.
Currently 74 destroyers and frigates as well as 63 submarines make up
the Chinese blue-water navy. The new missiles, which in theory could be
launched from either platform, are expected to do their share in beefing
up the force. What ship-launched land-attack cruise missiles can
achieve has been impressively demonstrated by the US Navy and its allies
in the 1991 Persian Gulf War, the 1995 Bosnian War, the 2003 invasion
of Iraq and the 2011 campaign against Libya, among others.
According to James R. Holmes, an associate professor at the US Naval War
College, it's clear that the Chinese Tomahawk isn't meant for
contingencies in East and Southeast Asia. Against China's opponents
there, they are hardly needed.
“China's inventory of land-based ballistic missiles already gives
Beijing an enormous asset to Chinese diplomacy vis-a-vis countries
within the missile envelope strikingly depicted in the Pentagon's annual
reports on Chinese military power,” Holmes told Asia Sentinel. But, he
said, outside the range of the Second Artillery, the unit controlling
the PLA's arsenal of land-based nuclear and conventional missiles, the
picture is different.
“There a land-attack cruise missile grants the PLA Navy an option to
project power from the sea, much as the US Navy has enjoyed since the
Tomahawk debuted in the 1980s,” Holmes said. “This is part of China's
coming-out party as a blue-water sea power.”
In order to evolve from a Mao-inspired naval force that kept its home
ports pretty much in view to one that ensures free passage for Chinese
merchant fleets tens of thousands of kilometers away, Beijing not only
needs continuing breakthroughs in the acquisition of weapon systems but
must also send the navy to practice. Farewell ceremonies in China's
naval bases have been becoming more and more familiar to the Chinese
blue-water fleets ever since 2008, when China became a participating
member in the international anti-piracy patrols off Somalia, having
marked the first time Chinese warships operated outside their own
territorial waters.
Illustrating the Somalia mission's importance to the navy’s
coming-of-age are the numbers when added up: Since operations began, in
stints that last about four months, Beijing has dispatched 11 naval
escort task forces that usually consist of one or two destroyers or
frigates and one supply ship. If deployment continues at this pace, each
destroyer and frigate will have had its turn in about five years.
Because the task forces come with well over 600 sailors plus a few dozen
special operations personnel, thousands of Chinese military men and
women who rotate through the anti-pirate patrol operations are provided
with the opportunity to get somewhere near to what could cautiously be
described as real combat stations.
Chances to sail elsewhere for the odd operation and also to carry out
friendly calls to far-away ports have been deriving from the Somalia
mission: In 2010, Chinese warships visited Egypt, Italy and Greece.
Last year, a missile frigate was diverted from the Somali coast to
waters off Libya. In what amounted to the navy’s first-ever operation in
the Mediterranean, it protected the evacuation of Chinese civilians
amid the raging civil war. some 12,000 km from its home port.
In mid-August, also for the first time in history, the PLA navy paid a
friendly visit to Israel and later made its maiden entry into the Black
Sea, sailing with a destroyer and a frigate that are part of the 11th
Chinese naval escort task force, to Bulgaria. The Chinese naval hospital
ship Peace Ark has also been cruising Asian, African and Caribbean
waters in the meantime, treating tens of thousands of afflicted people
as part of a goodwill mission.
Although Chinese soldiers and sailors have fired hardly any shots during
their stints off the African coast, let alone on excursions into the
Mediterranean, the missions are hugely valuable because according to the
PLA calculus, this hands-on experience would be badly needed if in
future conflicts an enemy were to block the Suez Canal, the Strait of
Hormuz or the Malacca Straits.
Professor Holmes says a Chinese “Tomahawk” fits neatly into the
equation. He finds that although such a system is of concrete use mainly
for powers like the US, which unlike China do not maintain an inventory
of conventional, land-based ballistic missiles that can devastate most
potential opponents, in China's case, it's a very plausible choice, if
only to provide Beijing's foreign policy with powerful argumentative
ammunition.
“Demonstrated capability confers diplomatic influence,” he said. “This
adds luster to the PLA Navy's reputation outside East Asia and to
China's reputation more broadly.”
Thursday, August 23, 2012
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