ComNavOps
has discussed various aspects of what our naval force structure should be but
it’s generally been in isolation rather than presented as a grand
overview. This has sometimes made it
difficult for people who haven’t been following the blog closely to understand
how the individual components relate and where they fit in the overall force
structure. I think it’s time to begin
presenting the overall picture. One way
to do this is to examine the naval force structure we’ll need to fight China and
win. Of course, we lack an explicit
military strategy which is what we really need to do a detailed analysis and
presentation but we can still generate a pretty good picture just by looking at
the typical types of naval operations that will be needed.
With
that in mind, here are some of the naval operations that will be required in
the China War and the specific force needed to meet those requirements.
Tomahawk Strikes – We will need
massive, very long range, cruise missile strikes against Chinese bases,
industrial facilities, etc. The easiest
and most survivable way to accomplish this is via submarine. We need a moderate sized SSGN force. The handful of Virginia Payload Module
equipped Virginia class subs with their 40 cruise missiles is simply
insufficient and inefficient compared to the 154 missiles carried by a single
Ohio class SSGN. It takes 4 Virginias to equal the
missile load of a single Ohio SSGN. Let’s
recall that the Tomahawk strike on the Syrian airbase in response to the
chemical weapon attack used 70+ missiles and was only a partial strike on a
small, undefended base. Any serious
strike against any substantial, defended target is going to require hundreds of
missiles. Trying to mass and coordinate
a dozen Virginias is much more difficult than using two or three Ohio
SSGNs. We simply must build more SSGNs.
We
also need a new cruise missile. The
Tomahawk is old, slow, non-stealthy, and has limited capabilities. The attrition rate among Tomahawks in a peer
defended attack will be substantial which will require much greater numbers of
missiles to achieve the desired result – numbers we don’t have in inventory.
Our
surface ships will have to participate in Tomahawk strikes and the Burke is our
only cruise missile shooter. In order to
get our Burkes into launch position, they will have to be escorted. In a role reversal, the escorts will be
carriers. The carriers will provide the
aircraft portion of a strong, layered defense in addition to the Burke’s own
AAW capabilities.
Air Force Protection – The Air Force is
going to be busy launching constant, very long range B-2/21 bomber strikes and
will need protected air corridors to the extent possible. Carriers will have to provide temporary,
mobile, air superiority to create protected transit lanes. This will require long range air superiority
fighters with very large weapon loads.
Anti-Surface
Superiority
– The Navy will need to establish surface superiority – total domination,
actually – to enable free movement of submarines, unhindered by enemy ASW
forces, free movement of carrier forces, transport of supplies, at-sea fleet
logistic support, etc. Since carriers
can’t be everywhere and will have higher priority tasks, this will require
independent (independent of carrier support) surface groups tasked with
eliminating Chinese surface forces and capable of operating, at least
initially, with minimal or no air support.
These surface groups will need extensive organic small UAV capability
for local situational awareness, a long range (200 miles or so), stealthy
anti-ship cruise missile, and heavy naval guns for those close range,
unanticipated naval encounters that are all too common in naval warfare.
ASW – Arguably, the most
important aspect of our naval operations will be our submarine activities. To do this successfully, we need to provide
the maximum amount of ASW support. We
need to attack enemy subs and ASW assets at the source (factories, supplies,
bases) and at sea, as they operate. All
of the source attacks will, of course, be on the Chinese mainland and all the
operating attacks will be inside the first island chain. We need to be able to penetrate the A2/AD
zone, find those assets, and destroy them.
This leads back to a long range strike capability (Tomahawk or, ideally,
a Tomahawk replacement) and the ability to operate near or inside the first
island chain using surface groups.
Logistics Convoys – Resupply convoys
from the US
west coast will have to transit to Pearl Harbor
and beyond and will require ASW/AAW escort.
A typical escort group should include small ASW corvettes and a single
Burke AAW destroyer.
Air Superiority – The one absolute
we count on, operationally, is that the Chinese will make a Taiwan invasion the
initial action of any war. Assuming we
intend to contest that, a Guadalcanal-like battle will ensue with the Chinese
invasion fleet on the west side of Taiwan and US naval forces on the east. Carriers will provide the local air support
over Taiwan and will attempt to establish air superiority over the island and
the Chinese fleet – no easy task. Again,
this demands a pure air superiority fighter for our air wings.
Mine Warfare – The Chinese
reportedly have hundreds of thousands of mines and we have no useful mine
countermeasures capability. Offensively,
on our part, the Chinese are contained by the first island chain and should be
bottled up by mining the relatively narrow passages out of the chain. However, we have little to no useful mining
capability as measured by the ability to lay thousands of mines in a very brief
period of time. A sub or airplane laying
a couple dozen mines at a time is not combat-useful.
Conclusion
This
is beginning to tell us what our fleet structure should look like and what
kinds of weapons we need. THIS …
this is how you build a fleet – from an analysis of needs not a desire to
pursue isolated technology for its own sake.
We
can see what we need and now we need to look at our current force structure,
see what’s useful, see what’s useless, see what’s missing, and recognize what
we need to begin acquiring on an urgent basis.
So
much of what we have, and are actively acquiring, has little or no use in a war
with China.
Of
note, what naval capabilities are conspicuous by their absence from the discussion? That’s right … amphibious assaults and
unmanned assets. There is simply no
strategic need for assaults and no tactical need for unmanned assets, at least
at their current level of capability.
To
summarize,
Not Needed:
Needed:
There
you have it … the naval force we should be procuring for the war with China. It’s noteworthy that pretty much everything
we currently have is not needed and everything we need is non-existent and,
worse, we have no plans to develop/acquire any of the missing items.
So
what is the Navy working to acquire?
Unmanned sail boats, a generic do-everything aircraft that will do
nothing well, more Burkes, tiny cargo/landing vessels for the Marines,
AI-powered everything, and more Fords.
I’ll
put it as plainly as possible: What we have, we don’t need and what we
need, we don’t have.
- amphibious ships
- F-35
- F-18
- Zumwalt
- Ford
- LCS
- unmanned assets
- new cruise missile
- Simpler, cheaper aircraft carriers
- new air superiority fighter
- SSGNs
- 8” gun ships / 16” battleships
- new electronic warfare aircraft, both air-to-air and air-to-ground optimized
- true destroyer
- Burke replacement
- mine countermeasure ships and equipment
A step in the right direction is CENTCOM fielding its own Shaheed clone. At 35,000 dollars a pop, the LUCAS loitering munition is the 2nd cheapest weapon in the American arsenal, potentially giving us more options for the upcoming fight.
ReplyDeleteYes, it's cheap, slow, and has little in the way of stealth, but at 35 grand a pop, you can buy 57 of these for one Tomahawk. Quantity has a quality of its own.
Something nobody is really talking about is that East Taiwan is all mountain and has no good space to unload cargo. All the Taiwanese ports are on the western coast, inside the strait, facing the chinese mainland.
ReplyDeleteThat's a gauntlet I wouldn't be keen on running.
"All the Taiwanese ports are on the western coast"
DeleteYour statement is incorrect. Hualien and Taitung, for example, are ports on the eastern coast.
I hope someone in the Pentagon is reading this. It may be moot however.
ReplyDeleteI would rather be in China's strategic position than ours with its:
industrial base(vs our ship-building anemia and fecklessness), it's clear commitment to its strategic objectives of retaking Taiwan (vs our "strategic ambiguity), it's stable of productive engineers(vs our gender studies graduates), it's logical procurement of the weapons required for the mission (vs our "gee-whiz" and "get what we need to secure my careerism" proclivities), and the almost insurmountable dollar purchasing power advantage of the Chinese currency (vs our impending//ongoing currency collapse buying frigates for 1.1 Billion $).
Sad that it was all a choice on our part. It did not have to happen. We just needed to honor the sacrifice of our Grandparents and stay committed to the things that made our country successful. But no, we chose the Welfare State.
Re-reading my comment, I don't mean to be such a Negative Nancy. I recognize and hope that the inherent contradictions of Chinese Communism, with its attendant corruption, may save our bacon. But it's criminal that we need put our hopes in that, rather than our commitment to being Men of the West.
DeleteYou clearly have no realistic assessment of the relative strengths and weaknesses of both countries. Until you actually study the issue(s) there is no point even discussing anything with you. Do yourself a favor and study the relative militaries, international trade situations in a wartime setting, actual educational output versus soundbites, resource availability, strength of allies, etc. before you comment again.
DeleteIt would probably take us 15-20 years to procure this force in peacetime if the Navy recognized today that it needs these weapon systems to successfully stave off a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.
ReplyDeleteIt doesn’t seem like there will be much hope of that to me. The Navy of 2040 will probably be a mix of Burkes, Virginias, a few Columbias if we’re lucky, 4-5 Fords, ~5 Nimitz, and some probably borderline useless unmanned ships plus auxiliary and support ships. Also some America class. Burkes will be the AAW/ASW platform. There will be no SSGNs. Most of the fighter aircraft will be F-35B/Cs and some legacy F/A-18E/Fs. Maybe several dozen 6th gen fighters if we’re lucky and the program isn’t cancelled.