What has
been the most effective naval weapon since WWII? I think you all know it’s the mine. I won’t even bother to list the statistics
concerning damage done to the US Navy by mines.
You either know them in a general sense or can readily find them on the
Internet. With the demonstrated combat
and cost effectiveness – mines are among the cheapest weapons available – you’d
think navies would be heavily focused on the offensive use of mines. Indeed, most countries are except for the US.
Now that’s a head scratcher. The US would, apparently, prefer to spend
billions on questionable ships and aircraft rather than spend thousands on
proven and highly effective mines.
Let’s look
closer at the Navy’s state of offensive mine warfare (MIW).
According
to the Navy document, “21st Century U.S. Navy Mine Warfare” (2009),
the only active mines in the Navy inventory as of 2009 were the Mk62 (500 lb
bomb), Mk63 (1000 lb bomb), and the Mk65 Quickstrikes. The Navy website lists the Mk62/3/5 and SLMM
as the active mines in the Navy’s inventory as of Dec 2014 with the SLMM having
been reactivated.
Here’s a
quick review of our offensive mines.
Mk60 CAPTOR (Encapsulated Torpedo),
ship/aircraft/sub laid, bottom, acoustic – Phased
Out
Mk62 Quickstrike, aircraft laid, bottom,
magnetic/seismic/pressure, converted 500 lb general purpose bomb; highly inaccurate for laying out a precision
minefield
Mk63 Quickstrike, aircraft laid, bottom,
magnetic/seismic/pressure, converted 1000 lb general purpose bomb; highly inaccurate for laying out a precision
minefield
Mk65 Quickstrike, aircraft laid, bottom,
magnetic/seismic/pressure; dedicated
2300 lb version
Mk67 SLMM (Submarine Launched Mobile Mine),
submarine laid, shallow, magnetic/seismic/pressure, converted Mk37 torpedo
Improved SLMM – proposed program to replace the
Mk65 SLMM with a conversion of the Mk48 torpedo – Cancelled (4)
We see,
then, that our mine inventory is antiquated and ad hoc in nature with adapted
general purpose aerial bombs being our main mine weapons. Why is this?
Surely the Navy must be more focused on MIW than I’m suggesting, here?
Well, aside
from the pretty damning evidence of our obsolete inventory, consider that the
“21st Century U.S. Navy Mine Warfare” document has approximately one
page of the 31 page document devoted to offensive mine warfare. The remainder is dedicated to mine
countermeasures (MCM). For some reason,
the Navy considers MCM to be far more valuable than MIW.
Here’s an
example that further illustrates the near total lack of MIW emphasis. An official Navy news release dated Oct 2013
described an SLMM exercise that involved the training, certification, and
launch of an SLMM (inert) by a Los Angeles class submarine (1). The implication in this is a bit
disconcerting as it implies that submarines are not routinely trained and
certified for offensive mine operations.
On the plus
side, work is underway to convert or modify the SLMM to be deliverable by Large
Diameter Unmanned Underwater Vehicles (LDUUV) as documented in a Navy presentation
(2). Again, the lack of emphasis on MIW
is evidenced by the single slide addressing the subject out of seven.
The LDUUV
delivery is, apparently, part of a developmental effort by the Navy to
construct an Advanced Undersea Weapon System (AUWS) which is envisioned to be a
networked system with nearly unlimited options and power.
“The Advanced Undersea Weapon System
(AUWS) is a group of unmanned systems (sensors, effectors, communications, and
vehicles) that can be pre-positioned to autonomously and persistently influence
the adversary at a time and place of our choosing. … The AUWS will give
commanders the ability to deploy sensors and weapon nodes as a minefield while
maintaining the capability to remotely activate and deactivate the weapons. …
This concept provides asymmetric
clandestine solutions that will free traditional platforms to be more
effectively employed in a capacity for which they were designed. The AUWS
provides commanders with unique operational and tactical options in contested waters
without regard to air superiority or water depth, freeing them to act
aggressively with autonomous inexpensive tools. Its modular design will allow
operators to integrate a wide variety of sensors and weapons, thus tailoring
the system for specific missions. Sensors of choice may include short-, mid-,
and long-range devices. Kinetic options include submarine-launched mobile mine
(SLMM) warheads, torpedoes (CRAW or Mk-54), AIM-9X missile, and projectile
explosives. Commanders may also apply deliveries to distort an adversary’s
tactical picture through deception (decoys, noisemakers, etc.), ISR packages,
and real-time intelligence. The AUWS may be delivered from surface ships,
submarines, or aircraft, or it may self-deploy from a friendly port within range.
Unmanned vehicles to transport AUWS deliveries may be reusable or expendable.”
Wow! Who wouldn’t want that kind of do-anything
capability using any kind of sensor or weapon deployed by any kind of
platform? Unfortunately, this sounds
exactly like the LCS in its original description. Remember the enthusiastic, near-raving
descriptions of the LCS as a network node in a vast battle management system
that would revolutionize warfare? Yeah
… How’d that work out?
There’s
nothing wrong with shooting for the moon with respect to technology as long
it’s kept to a minimally funded research project. However, if this is another example of the
Navy betting the farm on a fantasy dream that can never happen, we’ll never get
anywhere with MIW. You’ll recall that
the Navy bet the MCM farm on the LCS?
Here we are years later and we still do not even have a base level of
deployable MCM capability by the LCS while we struggle to keep neglected
Avenger class MCM vessels afloat.
According
to Second Line of Defense website, even the SLMM was scheduled to be
deactivated but was rescued by CNO Greenert (4).
Further
evidence of the lack of MIW focus is that the military’s mine deployment
capability is severely limited. The Navy
currently has no surface mine laying capability (4). The only significant mine laying capability
resides with the Air Force in the form of B-1 and B-52 bombers. The B-2 has the capability but does not train
for the mission (4). The B-52 can carry
10-45 Quickstrike mines depending on the base bomb size while the B-1 can carry
8-84.
“A handful of obsolescent
SLMMs––with perhaps less than optimum reliability, accuracy, and standoff
characteristics––constitute the Navy’s only clandestine mining capability. The
air-launched Quickstrikes have less-than-optimal accuracy and are best deployed
in less-than-contested environments.”
Thus, the
Navy has almost no submarine mine laying capability.
The Navy
supposedly conducted an Analysis of Alternatives in 2012 to address MIW,
however, that report, if completed, has never been released.
Another
small plus is that a Quickstrike wing package has been developed to allow
standoff delivery of mines by allowing the bomb/mines to glide for some
distance. A Sep 2014 test involving a
B-52H demonstrated a Mk62 mine release with a 40 mile standoff deployment
(4). Presumably, heavier Mk63/4/5
versions would have progressively smaller standoff ranges. However, given today’s thousand mile A2/AD
zones, long range SAMs, and high speed, stealthy fighter aircraft, a standoff
range of 40 miles for delivering mines is still way to close to expect the mine
laying bombers to survive the attempt.
The only
clandestine mine laying capability lies with the submarine launched SLMM,
however, the SLMM is based on an obsolete torpedo that is no longer in
production. Further, there are doubts
about the functionality of the SLMM due to the age of the Mk37 torpedo that
constitutes its base (4).
Who’s
responsible for this lack of focus on MIW?
Well, aside from CNO Greenert, it would be the Naval Mine and
Anti-Submarine Warfare Command (NMAWC) which has responsibility for the Navy’s
mine warfare (MIW) function.
Just as the
Navy has, for decades, focused on defense (Aegis, bigger Standard Missiles,
BMD) to the detriment of offensive strike and only lately begun to re-emphasize
offensive missiles, so too has the Navy focused on the defensive aspect of mine
warfare, MCM, to the detriment of offensive mining operations, MIW. We look at the A2/AD challenge and bemoan the
difficulty in combating Chinese activities inside that zone while ignoring the,
arguably, most effective weapon we could deploy. Imagine the havoc caused by minefields laid
in Chinese harbors and naval bases as well as around key transit and
chokepoints. We’re focused on billion
dollar technologies when simple, basic mines costing mere thousands could offer
an enormous “bang” for the buck.
(2)Navy
OpNav N95 Update, Mine Warfare Association Government-Industry Day slide
presentation,
(3)USNI
Proceedings, “Mine and Undersea Warfare for the Future”, Edwards &
Gallagher, Aug 2014,
(4)Second
Line of Defense, “Closing the US Navy’s Mine Warfare Gap”, Scott Truver, 20-Jun-2015