China Sails the Open Seas
When
China’s navy looks beyond its coastal waters, which it increasingly does, it
sees a kind of Great Wall, except that, from their point of view this wall is
meant to keep China pinned in and not to keep the barbarians out.
The Chinese call
this the “First Island Chain”, a line of islands, some small, others huge,
extending from the Japan archipelago to the north, the Ryuku island chain past
Taiwan and the Philippines to the south. The waters within this arc are
considered an integral part of China itself.
Increasingly, China’s
sailors are penetrating this barrier through various choke points to gain
access to the broader Western Pacific Ocean. In late November, a large
formation of Chinese long-range bombers and support craft passed through the
gap between Okinawa and the island of Miyako, the so-called “Miyako Channel.
The Miyaku
Channel is strategically vital for China because it is one of the few
international water ways through which the Chinese navy and air can access the
Pacific Ocean without violating somebody’s space. It is also located close to the
Japanese-controlled Senkaku islands which are also claimed by China.
The first time a
Chinese H-6K bomber passed through the channel was September, 2013; the first
multi-plane formation to use this passageway was in May this year, and late this
year an unusually large formation of eight bombers and support aircraft, passed
through the gap flew around the Pacific and then returned to home base through the
channel.
The H-6K is a
modified and much improved version and old Soviet Tu-22 bombers, known as a
“Badger”. It has been configured to hold cruise missiles under its wings or in
its bomb bay. The planes reportedly flew about 620 miles into the Pacific
before returning to their home base near Shanghai.
The navy, as
well as the air force is learning to conduct extended maritime operations far
from home waters and into the wider Western Pacific. Of course, China has
maintained a permanent, rotating flotilla of two destroyers and a supply ship
in the waters off the coast of Somalia and the Gulf of Aden since 2009. Unlike
Japan, it does not have any permanent base in that region although it is seeking
one.
In
March, 2014, two Chinese warships docked at Abu Dhabi, the first time a Chinese
fleet had made a port call on the Arabian Peninsula since the days of the
Treasure Ships of Admiral Zheng He. Also in 2013 the Chinese navy made its
first goodwill visit to South America, and it stationed a guided missile
frigate in the Mediterranean to help escort ships removing chemical weapons
from Syria.
These
missions are not war fighting, but they have enhanced capabilities for
operating in the seas far from home. They have gained experience in
coordinating with other naval services on anti-piracy patrol and exercised with
other navies, including those of South Korea and Pakistan navies.
In
the summer of 2013 a Chinese naval flotilla passed through the Soyu Strait,
which separates Hokkaido from the southern tip of Russia’s Kurile islands; they
returned to their home base through the Miyako Channel. The People’s Daily trumpeted this maneuver
as if it were a major triumph. Never mind that these narrow waters are
international passageways or that they could easily be closed off if the
Japanese determined to do so.
China
routinely conducts naval and air exercises beyond the First Island Chain as far
away as the Philippine Sea, and the number of Chinese naval flotillas passing
through the First Island Chain has increased significantly in recent years.
There were two in 2008 and 2009, four in 2010, five in 2011, and eleven in
2012. In 2012 surface combatants were deployed seven times to the Philippine
Sea and nineteen times in 2013. The Maneuver-5 exercise in the Philippine Sea
involved units from all three fleets, China’s largest open-ocean exercise to
date.
The
Chinese navy has now penetrated all of the Western Pacific choke points along
the chain from the Tsuruga Strait separating Hokkaido from Honshu in northern
Japan to the Bashi Strait separating Taiwan from the Philippines and the Sunda
Strait in Indonesia. In October, 2012 a flotilla exited the East China Sea
through the narrow passage way between Taiwan and Japan’s Yonaguna island in
the Ryukyu chain (where the Japanese army has constructed a surveillance
radar).
It
is thought to have been a signal from Beijing of displeasure over Tokyo’s
decision to buy the Senkaku islands a month earlier. Later two Sovremnny Class
destroyers and two frigates exited the chain through the Miyako Strait and
return via the waters separating Yonaguna from Taiwan.
The
navy has steadily progressed from a handful of vessels to multi-fleet (ie
elements from all three of China’s fleets) to combined operations with
submarines, drones and long-range bombers. Not only does China maintain a
permanent anti-piracy force in the Indian Ocean, it now routinely conducts
naval exercises and operates beyond the First Island Chain, says the US
National Defense University.
When
queried as to its purpose and intentions of these missions Beijing has a
standard reply: “The training is in line with the relevant international
practices and is not aimed at any one country or target and poses no threat to
any country or region.” One element o the training allows long-range bombers
are gaining experience navigating in the broader Pacific far from land markers.
In
June, 2015, Beijing issued a white paper on its defense priorities in which it
stated what has been obvious to any naval planners paying attention, that China
naval interests are no longer limited to its coastline but span the globe. “The
traditional mentality [going back to Mao Zedong] that the land outweighs the
seas must be abandoned,” the paper states. That the Chinese navy will enhance
its capabilities for “open seas protection” just puts into words what is
actually happening. The white paper leaves little doubt that China is intent on
transforming itself into a modern maritime power, capable of challenging Japan
or the U.S. in Asia and elsewhere.
*Todd
Crowell is the author of The Coming War
between China and Japan, published by Amazon as a Kindle Single.
1 Comments:
Very informative info like these segregated at one place is rare to find on net,thanks for sharing..
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