May 28, 2009 5:10 PM

Facing A New Missile Threat From China

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  This column was written by Andrew Erickson.


Authoritative Chinese military documents suggest that Beijing has taken a serious interest in anti-ship ballistic missiles (ASBMs).

U.S. government sources state consistently that Beijing is pursuing an ASBM based on a variant of the DF-21/CSS-5 medium-range solid propellant ballistic missile (MRBM). The DF-21's 1,500 km+ range could hold ships at risk in a large maritime area, far beyond Taiwan into the Western Pacific.

If fielded, the ASBM would be just one of a dizzying array of new platforms and weapons systems China has been buying and building since the late 1990s-systems which, taken as a whole, will allow China to assert unprecedented control of its contested maritime periphery.

The ASBM, however, differs markedly from the quiet submarines, lethal anti-ship cruise missiles, and copious sea mines which China has been adding to its inventory. It would draw on over half a century of Chinese experience with ballistic missiles, would be fired from mobile, highly concealable platforms, and would have the range to strike targets hundreds of miles from China's shores.

While probably intended with U.S. carrier strike groups (CSGs) specifically in mind, Chinese ASBM development could have deeply destabilizing consequences that would reverberate far beyond U.S.-China strategic relations.

The first damage from a demonstrated Chinese ASBM might be to the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) between Washington and Moscow, which has prevented both nations from possessing conventional (and nuclear) ground-launched ballistic (and cruise) missiles with ranges of 500 and 5,500 km. Various Russian civilian and military leaders have recently questioned the treaty's relevance to Moscow's national interests, particularly in light of U.S. ballistic missile defense development and Chinese nuclear MRBM capabilities (e.g., the DF-21).

Chinese demonstration of the strategic value of missiles with precisely the parameters banned by the treaty might generate considerable pressure in Moscow and even Washington for its revision or outright abandonment.

Additionally, other nations in the region, particularly Japan, which feels increasingly vulnerable strategically yet remains reluctant to develop nuclear weapons, might feel pressured to develop similar capacity of their own. At the very least, the resulting strategic tension would generate additional military procurement and energize long-term investment to counter or balance against Chinese ASBM capabilities in some fashion, a phenomenon that would leave all parties worse off than before.

At the political level, then, Washington must emphasize to Beijing that ASBM development on its part would have implications inimical to both U.S. and Chinese interests.

Responding to the unprecedented strategic challenge presented by an ASBM capability would require the U.S. military and civilian leadership to face hard truths. The most perilous approach would be to insist that the U.S. maintained its ability to keep the peace, when in fact the military capabilities that underpinned that ability were diminishing, at least in a relative sense.

Such a discrepancy between rhetoric and reality would erode America's regional credibility and fuel Chinese overconfidence. The prospect of documenting that discrepancy publicly might motivate China to conduct a demonstration of an ASBM; a successful test could create the impression that U.S. power projection capabilities-and the regional credibility that depends on them-had been dramatically diminished.

To prevent these negative outcomes, the U.S. must redouble its efforts to promote peace and cooperation, while ensuring that its own capabilities remain strong. Land-based air power will not solve the problem, because China's strategic rocket forces already hold all useful air bases at risk with surface-to-surface missiles simpler and more reliable than an ASBM.

Defensive measures to increase the stealth of the CSG, such as decoys, obscurants, and electronic countermeasures, may buy some time, but would the U.S. bet a CSG on their effectiveness? More importantly, it would be difficult to credibly demonstrate defensive measures without compromising their effectiveness; China and the region may perceive an erosion of U.S. strength and credibility, even if the CSG can defend itself against the ASBM.

Ultimately, it may prove necessary to shift U.S. combat power from massive, vulnerable platforms that present very lucrative targets, to platforms which are more concealable, survivable, dispersed, or disposable. Investment in submarines, stealthier ships, long-range aircraft, and unmanned aerial vehicles may present options for maintaining credibility even in an environment where the aircraft carrier is perceived as vulnerable. This would require a fundamental cultural shift away from a carrier-centric navy.

These challenges underscore the importance of maintaining positive cross-Strait relations, which have improved markedly since Ma Ying-jeou assumed Taiwan's presidency last year. Meanwhile, Washington and Beijing are increasingly pursuing tremendous shared interests, from deterring Somali pirates to averting a financial tsunami. They could do more to ensure that bilateral military relations are similarly productive.

This column was written by Andrew Erickson, Associate Professor,
China Maritime Studies Institute, Naval War College. These are his personal views. For further details, see "On the Verge of a Game-Changer," U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, May 2009.





Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 11 Comments
by YrSoWrong June 1, 2009 2:24 PM EDT
Good old police state, so dear to the hearts of bloggers.
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by babooph May 29, 2009 3:11 AM EDT
I buy China stocks-the lobbyist system of govt. in the States is too much for me to deal with as an individual-the US propaganda system has got enough brainwashed suckers to keep the downward spiral going -Obama cannot save them.
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by mav547166 May 28, 2009 8:42 PM EDT
First give Japan an Ohio Class submarine with all the bells and whistles(one can destroy every major city in the former Soviet Union), then tell them that its too late to get that one back, but if you settle this North Korea problem we might stop giving Taiwan an Ohio Class submarine tommorow. That is how you deal with the Chineese.
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by gunownerdan May 28, 2009 5:23 PM EDT
Almost all of our computers are made in China and we also owe them trillions of dollars.
We have been slitting our own throats for way too many years!
Reply to this comment
by beach671 May 28, 2009 3:12 PM EDT
Northrup Grumman designed China a Stealth Cruise Missile.

Google "Noshir Gowadia". Oh, they now have the blueprints for the B-2 bomber too among other things.

Let's hire some more foreignors to work in our Defense Labs and for the Defense Contractors. You know that was an awesome idea.
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by jtdev1 May 28, 2009 2:23 PM EDT
When you buy lots of Chinese products, you are funding their military. This should be obvious to anyone that considers it.
Posted by sjc_1 at 8:59 AM :



Your also funding our US Government. Who do you think is buying our debt?
Reply to this comment
by Oregon_State_OSU May 28, 2009 1:29 PM EDT
Missiles from Delta on Target for Moon Base Alapha !

Red Alert.
Reply to this comment
by sjc_1 May 28, 2009 11:59 AM EDT
When you buy lots of Chinese products, you are funding their military. This should be obvious to anyone that considers it.
Reply to this comment
by ksmit2 May 28, 2009 11:05 AM EDT
Our giant Asian friends have held the cards for some time whether we admit it or not. America's
drunken, twenty year spring break has given China the keys to our economy, technologies,
and infrastructure in more ways than we could conceive of. The missile systems are just
the cherry on the icing. China has financed everything from our Walmart trips to our "Meddle"-
East adventurism. Now they will choose the time and place to flip our circuit breaker.
Reply to this comment
by streatboy May 28, 2009 10:19 AM EDT
What will white america do when someone takes their big gun (CSG) away and sends them/us to bed with no dinner? Due to the internet this info is readily availible, an in your face reality check. If we parked our carriers out of range it would be to far for our jets to reach, do their mission and get back. If this was chess the opponent would say Check!
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