Special Report: U.S. rearms to nullify China's missile supremacy
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[May 06, 2020]
By David Lague
HONG KONG (Reuters) - As Washington and
Beijing trade barbs over the coronavirus pandemic, a longer-term
struggle between the two Pacific powers is at a turning point, as the
United States rolls out new weapons and strategy in a bid to close a
wide missile gap with China.
The United States has largely stood by in recent decades as China
dramatically expanded its military firepower. Now, having shed the
constraints of a Cold War-era arms control treaty, the Trump
administration is planning to deploy long-range, ground-launched cruise
missiles in the Asia-Pacific region.
The Pentagon intends to arm its Marines with versions of the Tomahawk
cruise missile now carried on U.S. warships, according to the White
House budget requests for 2021 and Congressional testimony in March of
senior U.S. military commanders. It is also accelerating deliveries of
its first new long-range anti-ship missiles in decades.
In a statement to Reuters about the latest U.S. moves, Beijing urged
Washington to "be cautious in word and deed," to "stop moving chess
pieces around" the region, and to "stop flexing its military muscles
around China."
The U.S. moves are aimed at countering China's overwhelming advantage in
land-based cruise and ballistic missiles. The Pentagon also intends to
dial back China's lead in what strategists refer to as the "range war."
The People's Liberation Army (PLA), China's military, has built up a
huge force of missiles that mostly outrange those of the U.S. and its
regional allies, according to senior U.S. commanders and strategic
advisers to the Pentagon, who have been warning that China holds a clear
advantage in these weapons.
And, in a radical shift in tactics, the Marines will join forces with
the U.S. Navy in attacking an enemy's warships. Small and mobile units
of U.S. Marines armed with anti-ship missiles will become ship killers.
In a conflict, these units will be dispersed at key points in the
Western Pacific and along the so-called first island chain, commanders
said. The first island chain is the string of islands that run from the
Japanese archipelago, through Taiwan, the Philippines and on to Borneo,
enclosing China's coastal seas.
Top U.S. military commanders explained the new tactics to Congress in
March in a series of budget hearings. The commandant of the U.S. Marine
Corps, General David Berger, told the Senate Armed Services Committee on
March 5 that small units of Marines armed with precision missiles could
assist the U.S. Navy to gain control of the seas, particularly in the
Western Pacific. "The Tomahawk missile is one of the tools that is going
to allow us to do that," he said.
The Tomahawk - which first gained fame when launched in massed strikes
during the 1991 Gulf War - has been carried on U.S. warships and used to
attack land targets in recent decades. The Marines would test fire the
cruise missile through 2022 with the aim of making it operational the
following year, top Pentagon commanders testified.
At first, a relatively small number of land-based cruise missiles will
not change the balance of power. But such a shift would send a strong
political signal that Washington is preparing to compete with China's
massive arsenal, according to senior U.S. and other Western strategists.
Longer term, bigger numbers of these weapons combined with similar
Japanese and Taiwanese missiles would pose a serious threat to Chinese
forces, they say. The biggest immediate threat to the PLA comes from
new, long-range anti-ship missiles now entering service with U.S. Navy
and Air Force strike aircraft.
"The Americans are coming back strongly," said Ross Babbage, a former
senior Australian government defense official and now a non-resident
fellow at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and Budgetary
Assessments, a security research group. "By 2024 or 2025 there is a
serious risk for the PLA that their military developments will be
obsolete."
A Chinese military spokesman, Senior Colonel Wu Qian, warned last
October that Beijing would "not stand by" if Washington deployed
land-based, long-range missiles in the Asia-Pacific region.
China's foreign ministry accused the United States of sticking "to its
cold war mentality" and "constantly increasing military deployment" in
the region.
"Recently, the United States has gotten worse, stepping up its pursuit
of a so-called 'Indo-Pacific strategy' that seeks to deploy new weapons,
including ground-launched intermediate-range missiles, in the
Asia-Pacific region," the ministry said in a statement to Reuters.
"China firmly opposes that."
Pentagon spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Dave Eastburn said he would not
comment on statements by the Chinese government or the PLA.
U.S. MILITARY UNSHACKLED
While the coronavirus pandemic rages, Beijing has increased its military
pressure on Taiwan and exercises in the South China Sea. In a show of
strength, on April 11 the Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning led a
flotilla of five other warships into the Western Pacific through the
Miyako Strait to the northeast of Taiwan, according to Taiwan's Defense
Ministry. On April 12, the Chinese warships exercised in waters east and
south of Taiwan, the ministry said.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy was forced to tie up the aircraft carrier USS
Theodore Roosevelt at Guam while it battles to contain a coronavirus
outbreak among the crew of the giant warship. However, the U.S. Navy
managed to maintain a powerful presence off the Chinese coast. The
guided-missile destroyer USS Barry passed through the Taiwan Strait
twice in April. And the amphibious assault ship USS America last month
exercised in the East China Sea and South China Sea, the U.S.
Indo-Pacific Command said.
In a series last year, Reuters reported that while the U.S. was
distracted by almost two decades of war in the Middle East and
Afghanistan, the PLA had built a missile force designed to attack the
aircraft carriers, other surface warships and network of bases that form
the backbone of American power in Asia. Over that period, Chinese
shipyards built the world's biggest navy, which is now capable of
dominating the country's coastal waters and keeping U.S. forces at bay.
The series also revealed that in most categories, China's missiles now
rival or outperform counterparts in the armories of the U.S. alliance.
China derived an advantage because it was not party to a Cold War-era
treaty - the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) - that
banned the United States and Russia from possessing ground-launched
ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges from 500 kilometers to 5,500
kilometers. Unrestrained by the INF pact, China has deployed about 2,000
of these weapons, according to U.S. and other Western estimates.
While building up its missile forces on land, the PLA also fitted
powerful, long-range anti-ship missiles to its warships and strike
aircraft.
This accumulated firepower has shifted the regional balance of power in
China's favor. The United States, long the dominant military power in
Asia, can no longer be confident of victory in a military clash in
waters off the Chinese coast, according to senior retired U.S. military
officers.
But the decision by President Donald Trump last year to exit the INF
treaty has given American military planners new leeway. Almost
immediately after withdrawing from the pact on August 2, the
administration signaled it would respond to China's missile force. The
next day, U.S. Secretary for Defense Mark Esper said he would like to
see ground-based missiles deployed in Asia within months, but he
acknowledged it would take longer.
Later that month, the Pentagon tested a ground-launched Tomahawk cruise
missile. In December, it tested a ground-launched ballistic missile. The
INF treaty banned such ground-launched weapons, and thus both tests
would have been forbidden.
A senior Marines commander, Lieutenant General Eric Smith, told the
Senate Armed Services Committee on March 11 that the Pentagon leadership
had instructed the Marines to field a ground-launched cruise missile
"very quickly."
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The U.S. Navy guided-missile cruiser USS Monterey fires a Tomahawk
land attack missile April 14, 2018. U.S. Navy/Lt. j.g Matthew
Daniels/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
The budget documents show that the Marines have requested $125
million to buy 48 Tomahawk missiles from next year. The Tomahawk has
a range of 1,600km, according to its manufacturer, Raytheon Company.
Smith said the cruise missile may not ultimately prove to be the
most suitable weapon for the Marines. "It may be a little too heavy
for us," he told the Senate Armed Services Committee, but experience
gained from the tests could be transferred to the army.
Smith also said the Marines had successfully tested a new
shorter-range anti-ship weapon, the Naval Strike Missile, from a
ground launcher and would conduct another test in June. He said if
that test was successful, the Marines intended to order 36 of these
missiles in 2022. The U.S. Army is also testing a new long-range,
land-based missile that can target warships. This missile would have
been prohibited under the INF treaty.
The Marine Corps said in a statement it was evaluating the Naval
Strike Missile to target ships and the Tomahawk for attacking
targets on land. Eventually, the Marines aimed to field a system
"that could engage long-range moving targets either on land or sea,"
the statement said.
The Defense Department also has research underway on new, long-range
strike weapons, with a budget request of $3.2 billion for hypersonic
technology, mostly for missiles.
China's foreign ministry drew a distinction between the PLA's
arsenal of missiles and the planned U.S. deployment. It said China's
missiles were "located in its territory, especially short and
medium-range missiles, which cannot reach the mainland of the United
States. This is fundamentally different from the U.S., which is
vigorously pushing forward deployment."
BOTTLING UP CHINA'S NAVY
Military strategists James Holmes and Toshi Yoshihara suggested
almost a decade ago that the first island chain was a natural
barrier that could be exploited by the American military to counter
the Chinese naval build-up. Ground-based anti-ship missiles could
command key passages through the island chain into the Western
Pacific as part of a strategy to keep the rapidly expanding Chinese
navy bottled up, they suggested.
In embracing this strategy, Washington is attempting to turn Chinese
tactics back on the PLA. Senior U.S. commanders have warned that
China's land-based cruise and ballistic missiles would make it
difficult for U.S. and allied navies to operate near China's coastal
waters.
But deploying ground-based U.S. and allied missiles in the island
chain would pose a similar threat to Chinese warships - to vessels
operating in the South China Sea, East China Sea and Yellow Sea, or
ships attempting to break out into the Western Pacific. Japan and
Taiwan have already deployed ground-based anti-ship missiles for
this purpose.
"We need to be able to plug up the straits," said Holmes, a
professor at the U.S. Naval War College. "We can, in effect, ask
them if they want Taiwan or the Senkakus badly enough to see their
economy and armed forces cut off from the Western Pacific and Indian
Ocean. In all likelihood the answer will be no."
Holmes was referring to the uninhabited group of isles in the East
China Sea - known as the Senkaku islands in Japan and the Diaoyu
islands in China - that are claimed by both Tokyo and Beijing.
The United States faces challenges in plugging the first island
chain. Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte's decision to distance
himself from the United States and forge closer ties with China is a
potential obstacle to American plans. U.S. forces could face
barriers to operating from strategically important islands in the
Philippines archipelago after Duterte in February scrapped a key
security agreement with Washington.
And if U.S. forces do deploy in the first island chain with
anti-ship missiles, some U.S. strategists believe this won't be
decisive, as the Marines would be vulnerable to strikes from the
Chinese military.
The United States has other counterweights. The firepower of
long-range U.S. Air Force bombers could pose a bigger threat to
Chinese forces than the Marines, the strategists said. Particularly
effective, they said, could be the stealthy B-21 bomber, which is
due to enter service in the middle of this decade, armed with
long-range missiles.
The Pentagon is already moving to boost the firepower of its
existing strike aircraft in Asia. U.S. Navy Super Hornet jets and
Air Force B-1 bombers are now being armed with early deliveries of
Lockheed Martin's new Long Range Anti-Ship Missile, according to the
budget request documents. The new missile is being deployed in
response to an "urgent operational need" for the U.S. Pacific
Command, the documents explain.
The new missile carries a 450 kilogram warhead and is capable of
"semi-autonomous" targeting, giving it some ability to steer itself,
according to the budget request. Details of the stealthy cruise
missile's range are classified. But U.S. and other Western military
officials estimate it can strike targets at distances greater than
800 kilometers.
The budget documents show the Pentagon is seeking $224 million to
order another 53 of these missiles in 2021. The U.S. Navy and Air
Force expect to have more than 400 of them in service by 2025,
according to orders projected in the documents.
This new anti-ship missile is derived from an existing Lockheed
long-range, land attack weapon, the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff
Missile. The Pentagon is asking for $577 million next year to order
another 400 of these land-attack missiles.
"The U.S. and allied focus on long-range land-attack and anti-ship
cruise missiles was the quickest way to rebuild long-range
conventional firepower in the Western Pacific region," said Robert
Haddick, a former U.S. Marine Corps officer and now a visiting
senior fellow at the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies based
in Arlington, Virginia.
For the U.S. Navy in Asia, Super Hornet jets operating from aircraft
carriers and armed with the new anti-ship missile would deliver a
major boost in firepower while allowing the expensive warships to
operate further away from potential threats, U.S. and other Western
military officials say.
Current and retired U.S. Navy officers have been urging the Pentagon
to equip American warships with longer-range anti-ship missiles that
would allow them to compete with the latest, heavily armed Chinese
cruisers, destroyers and frigates. Lockheed has said it successfully
test-fired one of the new Long Range Anti-Ship Missiles from the
type of launcher used on U.S. and allied warships.
Haddick, one of the first to draw attention to China's firepower
advantage in his 2014 book, "Fire on the Water," said the threat
from Chinese missiles had galvanized the Pentagon with new strategic
thinking and budgets now directed at preparing for high-technology
conflict with powerful nations like China.
Haddick said the new missiles were critical to the defensive plans
of America and its allies in the Western Pacific. The gap won't
close immediately, but firepower would gradually improve, Haddick
said. "This is especially true during the next half-decade and more,
as successor hypersonic and other classified munition designs
complete their long periods of development, testing, production, and
deployment," he said.
(Additional reporting by the Beijing newsroom. Edited by Peter
Hirschberg.)
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