Future PLAN orbat discussion

AndrewS

Brigadier
Registered Member
Again you're nitpicking what I said and putting them out of context. What I said was consistent with what I said before: if China has the equal number of super carriers as what the USN assign and deployed to the Indo-Pacific region, it would be enough to deter any ASEAN countries from trying to ally with the US to try to antagonize China. Does China has the same number of super carrier now as USN in the Indo-Pacific region? NO. So your counter argument is meaningless.

If ASEAN were the only issue, that would be valid.

But ask yourself this, how large a blue-water Navy would be required to deter Australia or Japan from allowing US military bases to be used offensively against the Chinese mainland?

China matching only the US Navy forces deployed in the Indo-Pacific is not enough.

The Chinese Navy would need to demonstrate that it can *easily* obtain sea control in the waters of the deep Pacific, which requires the Chinese Navy to have a significant margin of superiority over the entire US blue-water fleet.

Yes, it will take time for China to develop mature carrier platforms and build up a fleet.

But if relations are still bad after 2030, it should be feasible for China to fund the construction of 8 large carrier strike groups in a decade, from Dalian shipyard and Jiangnan shipyard. Afterwards, the construction rate can drop down to a more sustainable level.
 
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SAC

Junior Member
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
Registered Member
As an academic exercise, I looked at the operational surface fleet – Frigates and above – of the Soviet Navy at its peak. While subjective I selected January 1991 for having the greatest number of modern, large surface ships. I then looked at the U.S. Navy at around the same time. I could only find one source – of unknown accuracy – for the end of 1990. So reasonably close. I then looked at the U.S. Navy today, and what the PLAN might be c.2023. Figures – which may be out by a small margin - as follows:

Soviet Navy – January 1991

Carriers – 5 (4 x Kiev Class)

Helicopter Carriers – 2

Battlecruisers – 3

Cruisers and Destroyers – 59

Frigates – 32

U.S. Navy – end 1990

Carriers – 17

Battleships – 4

Cruisers – 42

Destroyers – 52

Frigates – 103

U.S. Navy – Now

Carriers – 11 (note 1 is always under multi-year refuelling)

Cruisers – 22

Destroyers – 69

Frigates – 0 (not including approx. 21 LCSs)

PLAN – c.2023

Carriers – 3 (001, 002, 003)

Destroyers – 50

Frigates – 32 (not including approx. 70 Type 056)
 

Totoro

Major
VIP Professional
That argument, that US will always have to keep a big part of its forces around the world while fighting a big war against some country, is flawed. Yes, SOME of the forces will have to stay around. But it won't be nearly 40% or 50%. More likely US military will redistribute and redeploy itself as much as possible. With maybe 10 to 20% of its Air force and Navy being tied to other missions. Leaving 80 to 90% of the entire military to be deployed in the war that needs it the most. (those percentages do not include possible down time for various platforms, as those apply to anyone, including the enemy)
 

Lethe

Captain
Not a fan of aggregating tonnage across types like that. The cost and capability profiles of surface combatants and amphibs are rather different, let alone assets like SSNs. That said, I'm surprised that the aggregate numbers are actually in favour of China, which has obviously been pumping out a lot of surface combatants recently, but still lags USN in most other construction areas. Also, 2015-2019 is too short a period to really be useful.

And then there's mine...

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AndrewS

Brigadier
Registered Member
Actually, I'm questioning his qualifications vs that of the almost certain several dozen (hundreds?) of PhDs who deliberately choose NOT to use PPP over MER. As in, they considered using PPP over MER, weighed the pros and cons, and chose MER in the end. Then they laid out their reasons for the whole world, which I posted for you. I would venture to say that RAND, Jane's, CIA, DIA, etc. would all concur with what SIPRI laid out.

And the CIA factbook has now switched to PPP as the best measure of economic output for each country.

GDP by PPP is a better metric for measuring the size of an economy.

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blindsight

Junior Member
Registered Member
I will say you need both offense and defense, but I think an upgraded 054A hull can do it with the right weapons. And yes, I think you can indeed fit more powerful radars on 054A, such as new AESAs, while keeping the 32 VLS, which could fire a combination of long-range SAMs, tactical cruise missiles, and ASROCs.
It would go against the purpose if you put an expensive long-range air defense system on the 054A hull. The cost would be close to that of the 052D, but you'd only get roughly half of its firepower.
 

ChongqingHotPot92

Junior Member
Registered Member
It would go against the purpose if you put an expensive long-range air defense system on the 054A hull. The cost would be close to that of the 052D, but you'd only get roughly half of its firepower.
The problem with 052D is that it takes too long to build. It is too complex. The thing about platforms like 054A is that you could build lots of them in a short period of time, and they are expendable. For 052Ds and 055s, once you lose them, it will take quite a while to replace them. Another option is to build a few modern day battleship type vessels capable of surviving multiple direct hits from anti-ship missiles (as long as the propulsion system is protected). But I am not sure how much such a ship would cost. Admiral Ma Weiming did mention something about a modern multipurpose capital ship 全能舰 power by IEP, but I am not sure if he has surviving punishments in mind.
 

AndrewS

Brigadier
Registered Member
The problem with 052D is that it takes too long to build. It is too complex. The thing about platforms like 054A is that you could build lots of them in a short period of time, and they are expendable. For 052Ds and 055s, once you lose them, it will take quite a while to replace them. Another option is to build a few modern day battleship type vessels capable of surviving multiple direct hits from anti-ship missiles (as long as the propulsion system is protected). But I am not sure how much such a ship would cost. Admiral Ma Weiming did mention something about a modern multipurpose capital ship 全能舰 power by IEP, but I am not sure if he has surviving punishments in mind.

In terms of construction time, it should be pretty similar for the Type-052 and Type-054
The modules can be worked on in parallel during the fabrication stage

As for launching ASMs, you can buy 2 Type-054As for the price of a single Type-052D
Both end up with the same VLS count of 64 Cells, but the Type-052D VLS are larger and can launch long-range SAMs and heavy ASMs

So you might as well buy more Type-052D, if you have a requirement for long-range SAMs or heavy ASMs, instead of buying the Type-054A
 

blindsight

Junior Member
Registered Member
The problem with 052D is that it takes too long to build. It is too complex. The thing about platforms like 054A is that you could build lots of them in a short period of time, and they are expendable. For 052Ds and 055s, once you lose them, it will take quite a while to replace them. Another option is to build a few modern day battleship type vessels capable of surviving multiple direct hits from anti-ship missiles (as long as the propulsion system is protected). But I am not sure how much such a ship would cost. Admiral Ma Weiming did mention something about a modern multipurpose capital ship 全能舰 power by IEP, but I am not sure if he has surviving punishments in mind.
Long-range SAMs require capable radars such as the 364A AESA, so the 054X you mentioned will by no means be much cheaper than the 052D. I see your point, but if you want to achieve that goal, you may think about building even smaller ships and distribute the systems you need among a larger fleet. The problem is this network may work well for coastal defenses, but PLAN also have to prepare for the scenario China has to project its naval power overseas, which will be inevitable with the Belt & Road initiative in mind.
 
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