Tuesday, September 24, 2024

The Electronic Battleship

One observation that has clearly come out of the Ukraine-Russia war is the prominent role of electronic warfare (EW).  We’ve seen GPS disruptions, weapon guidance disruption, intercepted communications, unit localization using signals intercepts, and probably many other aspects that are not yet common knowledge.  So, while the exact manifestations of EW’s prominence are not yet fully clear, the overall thrust is.  EW is a major factor/force on the battlefield and its influence is likely to continue to grow.
 
This is a naval blog so what does the EW lesson mean for naval forces?  Obviously, all the same considerations apply to the maritime battlefield as the land battlefield.  Enemy forces and weapons detection, weapons guidance disruption, localization using signal intercepts, etc. are all vitally important for naval forces.
 
Naval forces (and for the rest of this post we’ll focus on US Navy forces unless otherwise explicitly stated) have had EW capabilities to varying degrees for many decades now so what’s the big deal?  The ‘deal’ is that naval EW has long been the forgotten stepchild of naval capabilities (along with armor, large caliber guns, survivability, robust steel construction, weapon density … boy, the Navy sure has a lot of forgotten stepchildren, don’t they?!).  EW has been an afterthought, at best.  It is only recently that the Navy has begun to belatedly, and even then only in a minor way, address EW with the SEWIP modernization program.
 
Currently, each ship has its own small SLQ-32/SEWIP EW unit and the units are constrained by space/volume/mounting requirements, power limitations, placement challenges, manning constraints, training deficiencies, etc.  In other words, each individual ship can, at best, take care of itself but is of little or no help to other ships in the area.
 
If EW is so important, doesn’t it make sense to have a ship that is a behemoth at electronic warfare?  An electronic battleship, so to speak?  Where is our EW ship that can electronically dominate the naval battlefield?  Where is the ship that can electronically ‘swat’ UAVs and missiles from the sky?  Where is our area EW as opposed to individual EW?  We wouldn’t dream of not having area air defenses so why don’t we have area EW?
 
Where is the EW battleship?
 
What’s wrong with individual ship EW, you may ask?  Nothing except that, by definition, it’s limited to just the host ship and it’s haphazardly implemented and suffers from being at the bottom of the ship’s training priorities because it’s not the main mission of the given ship.  This is the same problem the Burkes face with ASW.  They are theoretically capable of ASW but they rarely train for it and are, therefore, ineffective.  Anti-air is the Burke’s main mission so that’s what they train for on the rare occasions that they train for anything.
 
Consider this historical example:  the USS Stark incident was instructive as it illustrated problems with the SLQ-32 performance, interface, false alarms, and lack of training, as noted below. 
The electronic warfare technician at the SLQ-32 console heard the F-1’s Cyrano-IV again lock on to the Stark. The lock-on signal ceased after seven to ten seconds.
 
Neither of the two SLQ-32 operators saw a [ed. inbound] missile warning. The main operator at the console, however, had turned off the incoming missile audible signal warning. He claimed later that the alarm was typically set off too easily, and distracted him from performing other signal analysis.[1]
 
We need a ship whose main – indeed, only – mission is EW so that it gets the training that is required to achieve and maintain proficiency.  We need an electronic battleship.
 
More than that, we need a multi-ship, coordinated EW effort.  Currently, each ship is its own EW entity, separate and isolated from any other ship.  There is no integrated, multi-ship or group EW effort as there is with missile control and usage via Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC) and Naval Integrated Fire Control-Counter Air (NIFC-CA).  Navy air defense utilizes a central command and control function typically located aboard the Ticonderoga class cruisers.  Again, we need a group wide, area EW control that integrates the EW of all the ships in the group.  We need an EW CEC.
 
Further, we need the group’s chaff and decoy systems tied into the EW control system.
 
Having established the need for an EW battleship and the general concept of large scale, area EW let’s now look at the specifics of an EW battleship.
 
 
EW Battleship
 
Analogous to a conventional battleship, the three main categories and levels of ‘weapons’ for an EW battleship are:
 
  • Main battery - electronic attack
  • Secondary battery - electronic protection
  • Tertiary battery - electronic support
 
More specifically, the EW battleship requirements are, in no particular order:
 
  • radar warning
  • targeting support
  • countermeasures
  • situational awareness
  • threat warning
  • signal collection / SigInt
  • direction finding
  • laser warning
  • drone/missile communications jamming
  • false signal injection
  • enemy GPS (GLONASS, BeiDou) disruption at point of attack
 
With the specific requirements in mind, what kind of specific equipment (EW ‘weapons’) should an EW battleship have?  An examination of the myriad existing aircraft, vehicle, and ship EW systems provides a good candidate list while understanding that each system would be significantly scaled up in terms of power and antenna size (both sensing and emitting).  For example, a small EW pod on an aircraft might be functionally duplicated for use on a EW battleship but would have, for practical purposes, unlimited power and emitters/receivers many times larger.
 
To give a feel for the types of equipment, here’s a partial list of existing EW equipment on various platforms:
 
 
Ship:
 
  • AN/SLQ-32(V)2 – Initially the most common variant, the (V)2 expanded on the (V)1's capabilities with new receiving antennas for increased radio frequency coverage. It added the ability to detect high frequency targeting and fire-control radars, providing early warning against an imminent anti-ship missile attack.
  • AN/SLQ-32(V)3 – The (V)3 added antennas with electronic attack capability, able to actively jam targeting radars and anti-ship missile terminal guidance radars.
  • Sidekick – active jamming in a smaller package as an alternative to (V)3
  • AN/SLQ-32(V)6 – Part of the Surface Electronic Warfare Improvement Program (SEWIP). (V)6 provides enhanced electronic support capability through upgraded antennas and open combat system interface. It is made up of the SEWIP Block 1B2, SEWIP Block 1B3, and SEWIP Block 2, which provide specific emitter identification (SEI), high gain high sensitivity (HGHS), and electronic support (ES), respectively.
  • SEWIP Block 1 provides enhanced EW capabilities to existing and new ship combat systems to improve anti-ship missile defense, counter targeting and counter surveillance capabilities. The upgrade addresses obsolescence mitigation through introduction of electronic surveillance enhancements (ESE) and Improved Control and Display (ICAD) as well as incorporation of adjunct receivers for special signal intercept including specific emitter ID (SEI) and high gain/high sensitivity (HGHS). The SEI and HGHS capability provides improved battlefield situational awareness.
  • SEWIP Block 2 provides early detection, analysis, and threat warning from anti-ship missiles by providing enhanced Electronic Support (ES) capability via an upgraded ES antenna, ES receiver and an open combat system interface for the AN/SLQ-32. These upgrades are necessary in order to pace the threat and improve detection and accuracy capabilities of the AN/SLQ-32.
  • SEWIP Block 3 (AN/SLQ-32(V)7) will provide electronic attack (EA) capability improvements.
  • SEWIP Block 4 is a future planned upgrade that will provide advanced electro-optic and infrared capabilities to the AN/SLQ-32(V) system.
  • COBLU Command and Control Coordination - Integrates area ship sensors and provides a common picture using passive sensors.
 
 
Aircraft:
 
  • EA-18G Growler: ALQ-218 Detection Pod  -  passive Radar warning receiver for airborne situational awareness and signal intelligence gathering. The AN/ALQ-218 detects, identifies, locates and analyzes sources of radio frequency emission.
  • EA-18G Growler: ALQ-99 High Band Jamming Pods  -  radar and comms jamming
  • EA-18G Growler: ALQ-99 Low Band Jamming Pod  -  radar and comms jamming
  • EC-130H / EC-37B Compass Call – electronic attack;  disrupts enemy command and control communications and secondary EA capability against early warning and acquisition radars.
  • MQ-1C Gray Eagle UAV - Multifunctional Electronic Warfare (MFEW) Air Large is the Army’s first organic brigade electronic attack asset mounted on an MQ-1C Gray Eagle drone.  brigade-level airborne electronic attack asset and providing limited cyberattack capabilities
  • RC-135V/W is the USAF's standard airborne SIGINT platform.
  • RC-135S Cobra Ball is a measurement and signature intelligence (MASINT) collector equipped with special electro-optical instruments such an All Weather Tracking Radar and Medium Wave Infrared Array (MIRA) designed to observe ballistic missile flights at long range.[24] The Cobra Ball monitors missile-associated signals and tracks missiles during boost and re-entry phases to provide reconnaissance for treaty verification and theater ballistic missile proliferation.
 
Vehicles:
 
  • Stryker - Tactical Electronic Warfare System (TEWS) which combines cyberwarfare, signals intelligence and electronic attack.
 
The EW battleship combines all these functions, each in its own 'mount', on one ship.


Antenna Size
 
The key concept that makes the EW battleship work is the available size and power of the various emitter and receiver antennae. 
 
For example, passive sensing is a function of sensor size.  Inter-galactic frequency sensors are massive in order to collect the faint signals from distant stars and galaxies.  A man-portable - or even an aircraft mounted – sensor is limited in size.  A ship, on the other hand, could mount Aegis sized sensor arrays, thereby vastly increasing the sensitivity and effectiveness of the sensor.
 
Similarly, one of the problems with Army man-portable or even mobile electronic warfare (EW) systems is that they are small and inherently power-limited.  Ship size systems with, for practical purposes, unlimited power would eliminate this constraint.
 
 
Dispersion and Redundancy
 
One of the [many] limitations of small EW package systems is that each package must execute several different functions, switching between them as needed.  On a ship, each function can be its own ‘mount’ and, therefore, be continuously available with no need to switch or ‘ration’ power.  The functions can be dispersed as stand alone, complete units.
 
Ships also offer the ability to have more than one of any given function, just as a ship has (or used to have when we still designed WARships) redundant guns.  This allows for both damage resilience and the ability to engage multiple threats simultaneously.
 
 
 
Note:  I’ve not specified any size for this EW battleship.  The term ‘battleship’ refers to combat power, not size.  If everything needed can fit on a canoe, that’s great.  If it requires a ship the size of an Iowa class battleship, so be it.  My pure guess is that something the size of Burke would suffice but I’ll leave it to the engineers to determine that.
 
 
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28 comments:

  1. Another reason for an EW specialist ship is escort. Navies have to be able to protect other ships, although this is not glamorous and tends to get a pretty low priority. A ship that can make radar-guided sea-skimming missiles unusable over a 10km radius would be a very effective escort.

    To start on this, you need an experimental vessel, converted from some other use, possibly a merchantman. It needs to be quite roomy, because things will get added and removed as the Navy learns how to use it. You *don't* start by building a specialist hull, because that will take a decade and you'll get it wrong, because nobody has experience in operating an EW specialist ship.

    It has another good use, which is training. It can enforce emissions control, by making emissions pointless, and it can turn off GPS and radar-dependent weapon systems to show other forces just how vulnerable they are. Realism is likely to dawn.

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    Replies
    1. "To start on this, you need an experimental vessel,"

      Absolutely!

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    2. The Navy has a couple spare experimental ships,
      DDG 1002 & 1003, IEP and big desk house for the antenna farm.


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    3. Seakeeping aside, Zumwalts do check several of the EW battleship boxes.

      Delete
  2. Another reason for an EW specialist ship is escort. Navies have to be able to protect other ships, although this is not glamorous and tends to get a pretty low priority. A ship that can make radar-guided sea-skimming missiles unusable over a 10km radius would be a very effective escort.

    To start on this, you need an experimental vessel, converted from some other use, possibly a merchantman. It needs to be quite roomy, because things will get added and removed as the Navy learns how to use it. You *don't* start by building a specialist hull, because that will take a decade and you'll get it wrong, because nobody has experience in operating an EW specialist ship.

    It has another good use, which is training. It can enforce emissions control, by making emissions pointless, and it can turn off GPS and radar-dependent weapon systems to show other forces just how vulnerable they are. Realism is likely to dawn.

    Of course, people will just say "we'll set our missiles to home-on-jamming." That's fine. That's why the EW ship has a lot of Starstreak II or similar laser-guided air defence missiles.

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    Replies
    1. If escort duties were to include the neighbourhood of ports or shores, including travel through narrow straits, could it be worth considering adapting Littoral Combat Ships?

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    2. "If escort duties were to include the neighbourhood of ports or shores, including travel through narrow straits"

      Not really. In those scenarios, the targets are already well known or well tracked by other assets. In the Persian Gulf, for example, everything is well tracked, continuously. We have no need for a EW ship. If things were to turn kinetic, we already have more than enough assets to attack every worthwhile target. Surveillance will be purely active instead of passive.

      Delete
  3. Another reason for an EW specialist ship is escort. Navies have to be able to protect other ships, although this is not glamorous and tends to get a pretty low priority. A ship that can make radar-guided sea-skimming missiles unusable over a 10km radius would be a very effective escort.

    To start on this, you need an experimental vessel, converted from some other use, possibly a merchantman. It needs to be quite roomy, because things will get added and removed as the Navy learns how to use it. You *don't* start by building a specialist hull, because that will take a decade and you'll get it wrong, because nobody has experience in operating an EW specialist ship.

    It has another good use, which is training. It can enforce emissions control, by making emissions pointless, and it can turn off GPS and radar-dependent weapon systems to show other forces just how vulnerable they are. Realism is likely to dawn.

    Of course, people will just say "we'll set our missiles to home-on-jamming." That's fine. That's why the EW ship has a lot of Starstreak II or similar laser-guided air defence missiles.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. John, your comments went to the spam folder. I check that folder several times per day and move the valid comments to the publish folder as soon as I see them. This is an occasional, though recurring problem that has no apparent solution and, given the free nature of this blog, I have very little control over the workings of it. Rest assured, I'll keep checking the spam folder frequently. Sorry!

      Delete
  4. My tweaking of this would be to say we need a directed energy combatant and it should probably be what functions as our AAW cruisers. Lasers, Microwave, EW. Keep the missiles and guns to a minimum to keep the environment ideal for these other systems to fight. Let this manned ship control remote shooters for the missile payload to reduce the size of what will automatically be a large ship at a high price per ton.

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    Replies
    1. If and when we get an actual, functioning, effective energy weapon, this would be a natural thing to consider. I've been reading reports that lasers are just around the corner since the late 1970's and I'm still waiting so ...

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    2. Would this ship then be generating vast amounts of energy emissions so it needs to robustly defend itself? Or, and their enough passive systems to make it disappear. Seems like if it's spoofing missiles that's not passive signal absorption.

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    3. "robustly defend itself?"

      The EW battleship wouldn't need more than close-in self defense. The rest of the ships of the group would provide the area defense. We are not trying to design a win-the-war-singlehanded ship. The EW battleship has one function only.

      "Seems like if it's spoofing missiles that's not passive signal absorption."

      ??? Not quite sure what you're asking or saying. An EW ship would be passive until the moment when missiles appear on the horizon and then it becomes active.

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    4. Badly written, I was saying I assumed this ship is a giant beacon, but as you say if passive until under attack then that's somewhat moot. For defense, I'm presuming you'd suggest the same close in defense density as you suggest for "actual" battleships.

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    5. "I assumed this ship is a giant beacon"

      NO!!!! This ship's value is the ability to achieve situational awareness passively. Only once it or its group is spotted and missiles are incoming would the ship switch to active defenses. At that point, being a giant electronic beacon no longer matters. Is that what you were asking?

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    6. That was my initial question until you responded.

      Delete
  5. An EW ship can have tactical value as a feint in addition to offense. If we started to jam one area, the enemy may assume that is where the main attack will be and divert assets there instead of where the primary attack may be.

    An EW ship would also make a good scout/spy vessel as they have to be able to be able to do SIGINT with passive sensors first to determine enemy frequencies in order to disrupt them. These could spy during peacetime (or grey zone conflicts) then go hot to disrupt enemy systems during hostilities.

    Since the new jamming pod for the F-18G is about 1200lbs, we could also equip modified SH-60s with EW and have them aboard our EW ship. This could provide over the horizon EW attacks followed up by the ship itself when it gets within range. In theory, some enemy radio/radar frequencies could be jammed over the horizon by bouncing signals off the ionosphere.


    The Zumwalt class was built to have significantly more electrical output than needed for pie-in-the-sky future weapons like lasers and railguns, and once the 155m kluges are removed could sport large emitter arrays.

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    Replies
    1. I like that you're thinking outside the box but be cautious that you don't attempt to combine too many conflicting functions.

      For example, a scout ship, especially one operating on its own, is a high risk mission that requires extreme stealth as well as robust sensors. That would seem to dictate a small, affordable vessel that we're willing to lose. It would also NOT require offensive electronic capabilities since the goal of a scout ship is to see without being seen. Thus, over half the EW battleship characteristics wouldn't apply to a scout ship. An EW battleship would be too expensive to risk on its own, probably wouldn't have the requisite stealth, and would have unnecessary offensive capabilities.

      Scout Ship

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    2. Adm. Obv, the AN/ALQ-248 pod is new jamming pod for the SH-60s.

      Delete
  6. Off topic, but want to ask ComNavOps what he thinks of this Dutch idea of small (500 ton) minimally manned (crew of 8) mini arsenal ships called side-kicks to supplement the magazines of current warships. They would only operate as an extension of a larger warship, using the larger ship's sensor and targeting. They could expand existing ships' weapons loadouts and could be a way to "reload at sea" by switching out an empty sidekick for a full one.

    https://www.defensenews.com/global/europe/2024/09/25/dutch-navy-to-buy-armed-sidekick-ships-for-its-air-defense-frigates/

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    Replies
    1. I have no opinion because there is no information beyond very vague, sales brochure type claims. Supposedly, this vessel will perform AAW air defense, ASuW land attack, ASW underwater drone operations, and other functions simply by swapping out boxes ... all with just 8 crew. Does this sound eerily like the LCS?

      Which of the several missions will the 8 crew train for or will they be experts at all the missions?

      Did you not the cost statement: "for an investment in the range of €250 million to €1 billion (US$279 million to $1.1 billion)." Not exactly a pinned down number!

      Hmm ... maybe I do have an opinion. I like the idea almost as much as I like the LCS.

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    2. I've been fantasizing about a vaguely similar ship for awhile. Sort of a mini-arsenal ship. One big problem with the typical arsenal ship proposal, of course, is the concentration of risk with 500 or 1000 missiles concentrated in a single hull, so that when it's sunk, it takes a significant fraction of our total missile inventory to the bottom with it.

      So it seems like it would make more sense to have a smaller ship, with maybe 64 or 96 VLS cells, and it could carry whatever missiles would fit in those cells. Plus whatever point air and missile defenses (Phalanx, SeaRAM) are appropriate for self defense.

      The main sensors and controls would be on the "mother" ship, so I'm not sure the crew of the mini-arsenal needs specific training in ASW, ASuW, or AAW. They just need to know how to load and launch the VLS, and maintain data connections to the "mother" ship which is where the sensors and specialized crew (which understands the sensors) would be.

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  7. Another reason for an EW battleship: emissions control. An area EW capability let's an admiral hide the type and number of ships - a valuable ability especially when you can no longer hide that you are there. EW is also cheaper than counter missiles (Yemen), historically more effective, and can be "replenished" without returning to port.

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  8. I think it's likely that we would find that we would need more than one class of EW ship.
    Some would specialize in protecting carrier task forces, others would be tailored for surface groups, and others might be optimized to protect amphibious assaults from drone swarms.

    The opportunities here are significant...game changing potential.

    A standard LM2500 turbine engine could provide 25,000 kW. That seems like a metric butt ton of electricity, but I have no idea how much power would be needed to run those EW systems.

    Love the idea of EW ships.

    Lutefisk

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  9. Of interest: Few oilers for the fleet.

    US Navy Not Ready for Prime Time

    25 September 2024 by Larry C. Johnson

    https://sonar21.com/us-navy-not-ready-for-prime-time/

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  10. Rather than standing by as escort, do you think it would make sense to employ heavily armored electronic warfare ships aggressively to draw fire like the Russian "shed tanks"?

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    1. Whatever you use to 'draw fire' should be cheap and expendable. A very high end, presumably expensive, one of just a few, ship is not what you'd want to use to draw fire. Drawing fire would be a good job for an unmanned drone of some sort.

      By the way, Russian (and Ukrainian!) tanks are be squandered in the stupidest way possible, in violation of every doctrine and tactic of armor usage ever established.

      Delete
  11. Does the AN/SPY-1 have some kind of EW capabilities?


    --Storm Shadow--

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