China's got a carrier!

If I’m reading this right in the Wiki cite, it’s interesting that they use the same CV designation for carriers in the Indian Navy as the US does. I would have thought that they would go with the Soviet model…wasn’t a lot of their early doctrine and equipment Soviet?

-XT

I’m not sure where those came from. The Indian Navy uses the UK’s “Rxx” pennant designations.

India has traditionally bought most of its aircraft from the Soviet Union, but it also had lots of British legacy equipment following independence, and both of its previous carriers (Viraat and Vikrant) were purchased from the Royal Navy.

That’s why it seemed odd. Maybe those are USN designations for the new Indian carriers.

-XT

Not to worry. It’ll only be to run our hotels, staff our hospitals and write our software.

D&R

…and run our gas stations.

I think those are standardized across NATO (CV, DD, BB, etc.)

This is a perfect reason for the US Navy to request another fleet carrier!

Except for the fact that this line of reasoning makes no sense whatsoever, I agree.

Assuming you weren’t talking tongue in cheek here…why? Even assuming this retread carrier was something really radical (it’s not), it’s going to take years and years before it’s in operation fully. They will have to build and fit out (and train the crews) of not only the folks to run the carrier and air wing, but all the escort ships and logistics assets to support it.

Having done all of that, they should have a good shot of being on par with either the Indian or British navies TODAY in, oh, another 40 or so years. If they really push hard.

-XT

Yeah, this carrier definitely isn’t something even in the same league as U.S. carriers, but they have to start somewhere to gather the requisite experience and training. This is more about projecting their power into nearby resource-rich waters that are disputed territories amongst their neighbors.

Here’s some excerpts from a couple of interesting stories from TIME: (bolding mine)

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<Note: The following story is from a year ago.>**

one kurk missile sub can melt that carrier and most of its escorts. talk about cost-benefit.

What is China’s anti-submarine warfare capability like? AFAIK, the US has the absolute best, quietest subs in the oceans right now. A torpedo or two to the shaft of a carrier would turn it into the world’s most expensive parking lot for aircraft. I know the Chinese will probably copy standard naval doctrine and surround their prized asset with support ships that can put in ASW work… but does that matter beyond a Seawolf having to load four torpedo tubes instead of just one?

Also, I’m assuming this thing will have some form of point defense but could it be overwhelmed by sub-launched missiles such as Tomahawks?

a nuke sub sitting nice and quiet under the thermocline will just wait for some noise signature and launch a special 3-tonne torpedo. it would have fired long before ASW units could catch it on their waterfall sonar monitor.

This isn’t really such a big deal, and certainly isn’t a new class of super-weapon. The limiting factor on Tomahawks has always been the cost per missile, not the availability of launch platforms. The Mk 41 Vertical Launching System has been in service since 1986, and each cell can carry a Tomahawk. If they wanted to, there has been no reason the USN couldn’t for example send a Ticonderoga cruiser to sea with 122 Tomahawks since 1986. If a target is worth firing a $1 million dollars at to deliver a 1,000lb warhead has been the limiting factor on its use.

Modern carrier protection requires a hell of a lot more than a few escorts and an ASW capability. The U.S. carrier fleet is protected by a flotilla of ships, satellite monitoring, AWACS planes, hunter-killer subs, undersea hydrophone networks, and a huge amount of sophisticated processing power. And even then, I’m not sure a carrier could survive the opening rounds of a real shooting war against a major power.

I think a Chinese carrier would last about 10 minutes in a real conflict against the United States. So I don’t think that’s what it’s for. It’s pure power projection - the ability to move the Chinese Flag to disputed regions or coastal conflicts and display a threatening amount of air power - the same use the U.S. makes of its own carriers. There’s something about a carrier group steaming into a region that causes everyone there to take notice and pay attention to what you have to say.

Speak softly and carry a big boat?

ETA: That article wasn’t joking about the Phillippines’ flagship being “WWII-era”. It was launched in 1943 as the USS Atherton, served until 1975 in the Japanese Navy as Hatsuhi, and has been in Filipino service since 1978 (although it was apparently decommissioned for some time).

She’s due to be replaced this year as flagship by the Gregorio del Pilar, a Canadian Coast Guard cutter that was launched in… 1967.

Wha… why? Diego Garcia is no where near China. It’s a way point for the west coast based US Navy ships headed for the Arabian Sea/Persian Gulf area…

[QUOTE=MyIntellectality]
This is the insular mentality that has made ‘USA - fuck yeah!’ the collapsing empire it is today.
[/QUOTE]

And yours is the kind of knee jerk anti-American horseshit that can be easily dismissed just as easily.

And the simplistic ‘but, but…they control 97% of rare earth minerals’ without looking into why that is (here’s a hint…we don’t mine them in quantity in the US because of the environmental impact, not because we don’t have them), or frantic handwringing because the Chinese have a carrier designed in the 60’s and begun construction in the 80’s…as if even if it were the greatest designed carrier in history that will magically give the Chinese the instant ability to utilize said carrier, and having gained that magical ability it will make their one retread carrier some sort of superpowerful weapon, nomnomnom.

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/delusion

-XT

So, you quote a simple fact as a launching point to go on a tirade against the U.S. that really has little to do with the thread and nothing to do with the factual statement you quoted?

You are welcome to express your opinions, but you would be better served to stay on topic with any thread in which you post. We have a perfectly nice BBQ Pit forum if you simply want to rant.

[ /Moderating ]

I take no offense to the poster who quoted me but it’s moot anyway as he seems to have gone off to join a band or something… But in any case, the US has the best, quietest, deadliest submarines in the world and that is just a fact. Jingoism does not make it that way. “America Fuck Yeah!” has nothing to do with it (and I’m Canadian so…). US subs are quiet and deadly. Carriers are big and vulnerable. Therefore, if China wants to protect this expensive asset they will need to surround it with extremely competent ASW forces because carriers can project power in all directions except underwater.

Forget rare earth minerals as a short-term US vulnerability. The subs and torpedoes and cruise missiles are already built and just need to be addressed to whom it may concern. Running out of unobtanium in the meantime won’t change that.

By the time the Chinese Navy has a carrier force, it wil be obsolete. In a few years, carriers will be launching drone aircraft, with autonomos capapbilities.
Manned fighter planes will become a thing of the past.