China’s Nuclear Subs Are Ready to Terrorize the Sea
Daily Beast
China’s about to join an exclusive club for nuclear powers. After decades of development, 2016 could be the year the Chinese navy finally sends
its ballistic-missile submarines—“SSBN” is the Pentagon’s
designation—to sea for the first time for operational patrols with live,
nuclear-tipped rockets.
If indeed the Jin-class subs head to sea this year, China
will achieve a level of nuclear strike capability that, at present,
just two countries—the United States and Russia—can match or exceed.
“China will probably conduct its first SSBN nuclear deterrence patrol sometime in 2016,” the Pentagon warned in the latest edition of its annual report on the Chinese military, published in mid-May (PDF). Once the Jins set sail, Beijing will command a nuclear “triad” composed of ground-, air-, and sea-launched nuclear weapons.
That’s a big deal, according to the dominant theory of nuclear
warfare. “The theory is that a diverse array of delivery systems creates
survivability by complicating a first strike,” Jeffrey Lewis, an expert
on nuclear geopolitics with the James Martin Center for
Nonproliferation Studies, told The Daily Beast.
In other words, if a country possesses all three kinds of nukes, it’s
harder for an enemy to wipe them all out in a surprise attack. And if
you can’t destroy your enemy’s entire atomic arsenal, he can nuke you
back—so you’d better not attack at all.
The word for that is “deterrence.” And China could be on the verge of
gaining a deterrence capability that most countries simply can’t
afford. China reportedly possesses several hundred atomic warheads, but
no one outside of the Chinese Communist Party leadership and, perhaps,
top foreign intelligence agencies, knows the exact number.
Regardless, that’s far fewer than the roughly 7,000 warheads that the U.S. and Russia each possess
but more than any of the world’s other nuclear powers, with the
possible exception of France. And compared to Beijing only Moscow and
Washington boast a wider range of launchers for their nukes.
The Chinese military’s rocket branch maintains around a hundred
long-range rockets in land-based silos. The Chinese air force’s H-6
bombers first dropped atomic bombs back in the 1970s—and modern versions
of the bombers can fire cruise missiles that are compatible with
nuclear warheads. When the Jins are finally war-ready, they will complete Beijing’s land-air-sea atomic triad.
To be fair, the Chinese vessels are, in a sense, playing catch-up.
The Soviet Union and the United States deployed the first nuclear
ballistic-missile submarines at the height of the Cold War in the
1960s—and France and the United Kingdom soon followed suit. Today the
U.S. Navy’s 14 Ohio-class missile subs take turns quietly sailing
deep in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, ready to fire their 24
nuclear-tipped rockets on a moment’s notice.
Russia, France, and the U.K.
still operate SSBNs, and India is developing one of its own. The Chinese
navy began tinkering with missile subs in 1981. The experimental Xia-class vessel and its JL-1 rocket were technological failures and never sailed on an operational mission.
Since 2007, the Chinese navy has completed four of the follow-on Jin-class subs and is reportedly planning on building four more. More than 400 feet long, a Jin can carry as many as a dozen JL-2 rockets, each with a range of 4,500 miles. A Jin sailing in the central Pacific Ocean could strike targets anywhere in the United States.
If the Jins finally deploy this year, a whopping 35 years will
have passed since China first tried to develop a functional SSBN. But
developing a missile sub is hard.
Expensive, too. China has not disclosed the cost of the Jins, but consider that the U.S. Navy plans to spend $97 billion replacing its 14 Ohios
with a dozen new submarines. Missile subs are big and complex—and their
rockets are, too. Training reliable crews and designing an effective
command-and-control system are equally difficult to do. Chinese subs
have been plagued with quality-control problems.
“While it is clear that the [Chinese navy] is making strides towards
correcting these issues, the capabilities of China’s nuclear-powered
submarine fleet remain in a process of maturity,” the Nuclear Threat
Initiative, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group, explains on its
website.
Officials in the U.S. and Russia take for granted the wisdom of a
nuclear triad. But in fact, the triads in both of those countries
developed as a result of rivalries within their respective militaries.
During the early Cold War, the U.S. Navy lobbied lawmakers and the
president for missile submarines in part to wrest from the U.S. Air
Force some of the funding and prestige that came with being America’s
main nuclear strike force.
The same internal conflict could be behind the Jins’
development. And whether China’s missile subs set sail for the first
time this year could depend as much on politics as on technology and
training. “There are a lot of rivalries and intrigues playing out that
might result in a triad—or not,” Lewis said.
No comments:
Post a Comment