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China’s Nuclear Development Cause For Concern, US Report

ND-TV China
Created: 2012-11-14 15:00 EST
The Congressional report also called on Congress to check investment by Chinese state-owned companies in the US. China has alreadyaccused the US of discrimination against Chinese companies in the past, but analysts say American businesses face tougher obstacles investing in China.
China’s military development was also a cause for concern. Citing figures from the US Department of Defense, the Congressional panel said within the next two years China may develop the capability to launch nuclear tipped ballistic missiles from its submarine fleet.
http://ntdtv.org/en/news/china/2012-11-14/china-s-nuclear-development-cause-for-concern-us-report.html
What China’s Nuclear Missile Subs Mean for the U.S.
By Joe Pappalardo
Popular Mechanics
November 13, 2012 3:36 PM
China is on track to field nuclear weapons on submarines in two years, according to U.S. government reports. But don’t start restocking the fallout shelters just yet.
The U.S. government is reporting that China, after decades of trying, is on the verge of fielding a true underwater leg of its nuclear deterrent, with new long-range missiles tipped with nuclear weapons on board its fleet of new long-range submarines. And that could transform the Pacific into a tense militarized zone reminiscent of the Atlantic during the Cold War.
On November 14 the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission will release its annual report to Congress, and that report will contain some sobering language about new Julang-2 missiles China plans to field in two years. (Drafts of the report, created by a Congressional mandate, have already been leaked.)

According to the report, JIN-class submarines, two of which have already been put to sea, would carry nuclear tipped missiles. Naval intelligence documents estimate five such submarines will be ready for service. The submarines and the JL-2 missile combination will give Chinese forces “a near-continuous at-sea strategic deterrent,” according to the report, and Beijing is “on the cusp of attaining a credible nuclear triad of land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, submarine-launched ballistic missiles, and air-dropped nuclear bombs.”

The Pentagon has watched warily as China has ramped up its submarine fleet, which helps the nation secure its economically vital sea lanes and protect its coastlines from incursion. China has quiet, diesel–electric submarines to lay mines and shoot missiles during combat close to their shores. But the larger, nuclear-powered subs are a newer acquisition, and arming them with nukes poses a different kind of threat to the United States and global powers such as Russia and India.

[…]What will the U.S. do about this new threat? 
[…]That’s the trick for these subs: surviving outside Chinese waters. Japan and America have assets in the Pacific that could detect submarines; a Chinese skipper would have to hide from them to get close enough to take a shot at the continental United States. And Christensen cites Office of Naval Intelligence reports that say the JIN submarines are less stealthy than Russian submarines built two decades ago. “They are too noisy to slip through U.S. antisubmarine networks,” he says. “The U.S. submarine community trained for more than 60 years to track nuclear-powered ballistic submarines . . . Given that record, I’d be surprise if China’s would live for long in a war. To me, they would be sitting ducks.”

[…]

During the Cold War, the Navy tracked Soviet subs using a network of underwater microphones called the Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS). This is still functioning, albeit with fewer sensors, in the Pacific. The Pentagon is working on next-generation tracking technology that could help mitigate the China sub threat. The Distributed Agile Submarine Hunting program, run by DARPA, is creating a maritime version of a satellite. These robotic listening posts could operate in shallow or deep water, and possibly follow enemy subs once they’d been detected.

The last-ditch defense against these missile threats are ground-based interceptors in Alaska, built to thwart an ICBM launch from North Korea. They could target the warheads fired from a submarine, Kristensen says, if the warheads were launched from far enough away.

Read more: What China’s Nuclear Missile Subs Mean for the U.S. – Popular Mechanics

November 14, 2012 - Posted by | Uncategorized

1 Comment »

  1. So Chinese subs would be sitting ducks for the US military which has 60 years of submarine
    experience.Well.Well.The PLA surely know this and welll nothing is constant/permanent in this world.
    The PLA will factor in this and would in all probability increase the survivability/penetration/lethality of their subs.Surely flush with cash the PLA will improve the military capability of their forces to deter any US attack.
    The US in all its wars has had a free hand. When they attacked Japan with atomic bombs they were immune from Jap retaliation.In any war with China,the PLA though not in the same leagu e with US forces can respond in a devastating manner .US bases and CONUS will be subject to PLA retaliation.
    Btw,any US bomber ,stealth or super stealth trying to drop nuclear bombs will be shot down before they can even approach China. It will be Vietnam multiplied by athousand times.

    George Smith's avatar Comment by George Smith | February 1, 2015 | Reply


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