Modern Carrier Battle Group..Strategies and Tactics

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
i've read the entire report. You need to realize that two can play the shadow, shell game.

Nothing in that report points to anything specific, or alludes to any actual, proven capability. Only assertions.

That's fine.

The facts are what they are. The us has a defense, proven many times over against an offenisve strategy that is only alledged. If the us national interests call for its forces to sail in harm's way, they will do so.

I pray thaty is not necessary in this area, but to think they will be bluffed and blustered into not responding is a huge strategic and tactical mistake imho.

Anyhow, this has been raised and discussed many times over...ad nausium as we say. So i will just leave it at that. We can amiacably agree to disagree.

amen!
 
People also need to remember that this is the US DoD's report on China's military. The US DoD is likely to err on the side of caution thereby puffing up China's military capabilities in any areas which may be unclear. It is unlikely that China's actual capabilities are significantly better than publicly estimated by its most competent competitor.
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
People also need to remember that this is the US DoD's report on China's military. The US DoD is likely to err on the side of caution thereby puffing up China's military capabilities in any areas which may be unclear. It is unlikely that China's actual capabilities are significantly better than publicly estimated by its most competent competitor.

Exactly right, the US DOD does cry wolf in a sense in order to maintain our ability to maintain our edge, liberals and those who seemingly could care less make it very difficult to maintain our strategic edge. Brat
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
People also need to remember that this is the US DoD's report on China's military. The US DoD is likely to err on the side of caution thereby puffing up China's military capabilities in any areas which may be unclear. It is unlikely that China's actual capabilities are significantly better than publicly estimated by its most competent competitor.

You can spin all you want as to the motivation behind the DOD report. But it doesn't change the fact that China report is an official document of DOD mandated by the congress As such it deserve more respect. To assume that DOD purposely misled,"puff up" or embellish any report for its own gain , is tantamount to perjury as such it will be treated as criminal act. You can have your own believe that ASBM is fiction but you just delude yourself. It is real for sure

Another thing what gain did you expected from puffing up the report? budget gain? No such luck the budget will cut irrespective of the China threat!
 
You can spin all you want as to the motivation behind the DOD report. But it doesn't change the fact that China report is an official document of DOD mandated by the congress As such it deserve more respect. To assume that DOD purposely misled,"puff up" or embellish any report for its own gain , is tantamount to perjury as such it will be treated as criminal act. You can have your own believe that ASBM is fiction but you just delude yourself. It is real for sure

Another thing what gain did you expected from puffing up the report? budget gain? No such luck the budget will cut irrespective of the China threat!

Histrionics aside, what are you talking about? The DoD report clearly states that China has operational ASBMs and I don't doubt it. At the same time I think the DoD in general gives China the benefit of the doubt of being more capable when it is unclear exactly how capable it is.
 

Schumacher

Senior Member
..................At the same time I think the DoD in general gives China the benefit of the doubt of being more capable when it is unclear exactly how capable it is.

I hear this often as well. But is it really true ?
Before J20/21, they were saying PLA stealth jets well after 2020 for instance.
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
If past history proves one thing, it is that the US DoD does not have good track record when it comes to predicting future PLA advancements. Both sides of this argument can spin that to give the conclusion they want, but it doesn't make either side's argument more valid.

If the PLA has an operational ASBM capability, that is a card they will hold close to their chests and not give up lightly. Because the kind of proof positive conformation a successful sea based test would remove all obstacles to almost unlimited US tactical ABM funding, and in a few years, the advantages the ASBM offers would be massively eroded.

The only time you might expect the PLA to actually conduct an ASBM test out at sea is if tensions are extremely high and war between China and the US looks extremely likely, but is not inevitable. For example, if China started to take back Taiwan by force, or if the Japanese started a shooting war with China.

In both instances, whether the US is obliged to enter the conflict will be a determination based on how the US president in power wishes to interpret the situation and relevant US laws and treaties. The US has been deliberately vague on the specific condictions for them to enter any such conflict precisely because they want to give themselves wiggle room to go either way depending on what is in America's best interest.

If China demonstrated an ASBM capability, that might weigh heavily on the US high command and directly influence their decision of whether they want a piece of that fight.

If is one thing for America to be willing to go and bomb someone back to the Stone Age for minimal US casualties. It requires an altogether high level of resolve to enter a war of choice knowing it will mean thousands, if not tens of thousands or more of US casualties in a few weeks of fighting.

An ASBM test before the US has committed would be enough to drive home the kind of party the US would be going to if they chose to get involved, yet would not give the US military anywhere near enough time to deploy an effective counter other than load up on as many SM3s as they could spare cells for before setting sail.

Something else to consider when contrasting ASBM and ABM tests is the nature of the mission of both weapons. For ASBM, you don't need anywhere close to 100% success rate to declare the weapon operational as you can quite happily shoot dozens of missiles for every enemy carrier. With ABM, you need significantly better success rates so you need more realistic testing.

With ASBM, you can easily simulate a moving target by deliberately giving the missile co-ordinates tens or hundreds of miles from the actual target upon launch and the have the missile adjust its course in flight to retarget the correct location. With the speed of the missile and its target, by the time the missile's own seeker comes into play, any movement the target makes would have minimal impact on the success rate of the missile.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
If past history proves one thing, it is that the US DoD does not have good track record when it comes to predicting future PLA advancements. Both sides of this argument can spin that to give the conclusion they want, but it doesn't make either side's argument more valid.

If the PLA has an operational ASBM capability, that is a card they will hold close to their chests and not give up lightly. Because the kind of proof positive conformation a successful sea based test would remove all obstacles to almost unlimited US tactical ABM funding, and in a few years, the advantages the ASBM offers would be massively eroded..
Have to agree to disagree here as well plawolf.

There are a multitude of things you can "keep close to your vest," and still test the system. The US does this regularly with its own surface missile tests, as well as its ABM tests.

The fact is, with a system as complex and difficult as this anti-shipping ballistic missile, with the environment it must operate in, with the huge C4ISTAR requirements, with the ECM and defenses (both active and passive) arrayed against it, to indicate that a system like this can be fully operational, or IMHO even initially operational, without numerous full up tests is just rediculous.

Sure they can fire it into the desert at static targets. Sure thy can simulate all sorts of things on a computer.

But they will never know what they really have until they actually test it in the envoronment it was designed to operate in, against the type of target they are seeking to hit which is manuevering to avoid being hit. And they have not done that.

As I have said numerous times...until they do, and have some degree of reliability, the effort IMHO is as much a high stakes bluff as it is the real thing, and it will not deter the US from doing what it has to do, and using a very strongly tested defense to do so.

In fact, the PRC would provide a much stronger deterence aginst the US Navy by testing it full-up and obliterating several manuevering aircraft carrier sized vessels 1000+ km off shore. That would send the strongest message. What they are doing so far is more apt to send the message that they really can't do it...or at best, they are not sure if they can.

As to somehow keeping the US from spending to defend against it...well, that is clearly not working because the US continues to develope and imporve its ABM capability as it goes. But it has tested it many times, and it is deployed on ships in the potential trouble areas.

Unless of course you have a U.S. administration in office that simply will avoid conflict or confrontation at almost all costs which will give them an excuse to do so. Can't guard against that scenario in any case...but I have no doubts part of the PRC's calculation involves that as well.

And part of the U.S.'s counter strategy, in addition to the very real defenses it has developed and deployed (and continues to improve), is to allow the bluff and/or misleading information game to proceed...and even play along with it. The longer the PRC does not actually test it...the better it actually is for the US.
 
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plawolf

Lieutenant General
Have to agree to disagree here as well plawolf.

There are a multitude of things you can "keep close to your vest," and still test the system. The US does this regularly with its own surface missile tests, as well as its ABM tests.

The fact is, with a system as complex and difficult as this anti-shipping ballistic missile, with the environment it must operate in, with the huge C4ISTAR requirements, with the ECM and defenses (both active and passive) arrayed against it, to indicate that a system like this can be fully operational, or IMHO even initially operational, without numerous full up tests is just rediculous.

Sure they can fire it into the desert at static targets. Sure thy can simulate all sorts of things on a computer.

Who said anything about merely computer testing? Of all the factors you listed, the only thing that cannot be directly simulated on land is the seeker processing. But fundamentally, there is no great difference between a radar guided air to surface missile and a radar guided air to sea missile. The main difference would be one of software.

If needs be, you can test the seeker at sea without needing a carrier sized target to hit. Simply position a few ships, or even just poles with big radar reflectors in a patter that gives off a return roughly the same size as a carrier or large warship, and see if the seeker can detect it and guide the warhead in the bit of water close enough to the poles/ships to have scored a hit if it had been a carrier sized target, and you would have validation without needing to let the whole world know. All the equipment could be removed before anyone else has a chance to snoop.

If you have solved the ground clutter issue with using radar, or the cooling problem with imaging sensors for a surface to surface missile, transitioning that to one of surface to sea is relatively straight forward. Thus, there is no fundamental barrier in terms of seeker tech so long as they have a seeker that can do the job on land.

In terms of hitting a moving target vs a stationary one. Even if a carrier is steaming at full speed, by the time the ASBM seeker has it in its sights, it might as well be stationary for all the difference its movement from the moment the seeker spots it impact will make.

The issue of trying to hit a moving target is ultimately one of midcourse guidance and course corrections and you can perform all the tests needed to validate that using a static target. As I have said multiple times, if they launched the missile at a different set of co-ordinates and then fed the missile a serious a new co-ordinates throughout its flight to simulate the movement of a ship at 30 knots and ultimately redirect the missile to the co-ordinates where the stationary target is. If the missile can successfully change course and then hit the static target, it would be able to hit a moving one.

In terms of C4ISTAR and ECM, well they can also be simulated on land, and moreover, even if the PLA conducted a sea test, one could still bring those up as counter points to argue why the missile might not be effective.

But they will never know what they really have until they actually test it in the envoronment it was designed to operate in, against the type of target they are seeking to hit which is manuevering to avoid being hit. And they have not done that.

They can have a damned good idea. As for maneuverering, well who actually even bothers to test conventional anti ship missiles against moving, never mind maneuverering targets? Even with subsonic AShMs, the speed difference between the missile and the ship makes any last ditch movements by the ship irrelevant. In pretty much all the tests I have seen, they just shoot anti ship missiles at a stationary ship or radar reflector.

In fact, the PRC would provide a much stronger deterence aginst the US Navy by testing it full-up and obliterating several manuevering aircraft carrier sized vessels 1000+ km off shore. That would send the strongest message. What they are doing so far is more apt to send the message that they really can't do it...or at best, they are not sure if they can.

That message will be just as strong whether they send it now or when the US is deciding whether or not to get involved. The psychological impact would be much fresher if the test was conducted during high tensions, and it would not give the US years in the meantime to focus on a counter.

As to somehow keeping the US from spending to defend against it...well, that is clearly not working because the US continues to develope and imporve its ABM capability as it goes. But it has tested it many times, and it is deployed on ships in the potential trouble areas.

Please Jeff, surely you can appreciate that US spending and investment in ABM would be far stronger if there was a proven threat to counter rather than right now, with ABM being increasingly left on the back burner as the sequester starts to bite and the Pentagon is making drastic cuts that have a massive negative impact on the readiness and capabilities of combat units. Units that at present, seem a great deal more useful than ABM.

Unless of course you have a U.S. administration in office that simply will avoid conflict or confrontation at almost all costs which will give them an excuse to do so. Can't guard against that scenario in any case...but I have no doubts part of the PRC's calculation involves that as well.

Whoever said anything about cast iron guarentees? At the end of the day, everyone has their own choices to make and their own cards to play, the most anyone can do is stack the odds and make certain choices as costly as possible for the other guy. If the cost is higher than what he is willing or able to pay, he will back down.

As with any decision, the less time you have to process it and the less time you had to think about it, the greater the chance you will make a mistake.

If on the eve of battle, the PLA demonstrates a game changing capacity that the Pentagon did no predict, then that will raise all sorts of questions about the reliability of casualty projections as well as worries about what else China might have up their sleave. That will cast doubt in the minds of US leaders and commanders, which might be enough to sway the decision.

If would be unwise to assuming that any administration is predisposed to fold or fight no matter what. The decision will be made based on a cost benefit analysis of the situation and the options.

And part of the U.S.'s counter strategy, in addition to the very real defenses it has developed and deployed (and continues to improve), is to allow the bluff and/or misleading information game to proceed...and even play along with it. The longer the PRC does not actually test it...the better it actually is for the US.

Oh come on, at least be consistent. The US ABM tests would hardly pass the kind of rigours criteria you have demanded the PLA ASBM pass. Yet you keep refer to them as if they are battle tested and their capabilities are beyond doubt. They are not.

The Chinese ASBM has not been tested against a carrier sized target out at sea, but neither has the SM3 been tested against a DF21 class IRBM with maneuverering RV and decoys now has it? Never mind trying to intercept multiple incoming missiles at the same time under heavy ECM.

That has not stopped the US from declaring it operational and fielding it on ships, why must you demand the Chinese ASBM pass a higher standard before you will accept the possibility that an ASBM might be operational without having been tested against a sea based target?

Yes, you run additional risks by not testing it in its intended operational environment, but since this is an offensive weapon, you do not need it to hit every single time as you would a defensive weapon. Given the extremely high value of its intended target, you can afford to fire off dozens of ASBMs, and so long as even one of them hits, the program is a success.

And all of the above only deal with a direct hit missile. If the ASBM was designed to release submunitions or a hail or sabots, the technical difficulty is greatly reduced while the hit probability is increased and the chances of successful intercept plummets.
 

J-XX

Banned Idiot
Pretty clear now the Df-21D is real and is operational. This is definitely a game changer. No wonder the US military is scared, they have no counter for this.
 
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