Undersea Webs
A web of strategic
projects is now taking firm shape as India enters into closer multilateral
military cooperation relationships with Japan, Australia and the United States,
as well as regional powers like Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam. Matters began
taking on urgency in late September 2014, after US President Barack Obama and
PM Modi have pledged to intensify cooperation in maritime security. Following
this, on March 16,
2015 the defence
ministers of the 10-member Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) at the end of the two-day 9th ASEAN
Defence Ministers’ Meeting in Langkawi, Malaysia, collectively stated that they
wanted India to play a far bigger role in both
the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) and the South China Sea.
In the near future,
therefore, under the auspices of the US–India Defence Framework
Agreement, foundational pacts like the Logistics Exchange
Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA), Communication Interoperability and Security
Memorandum Agreement (CISMOA), and Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement for
Geo-Spatial Cooperation (BECA), are likely to be inked by the two countries
later this year. Concurrently, Japan can be expected to extend funding from the
Japan International Cooperation Agency for the upgradation of naval air bases
and construction of new ELINT/SIGINT stations along the Andaman and Nicobar
chain of islands, which is made up of 572 islands (of which only 34 are
presently inhabited), stretching around 470 miles north to south. But most
importantly, preliminary planning has commenced on a Japan-financed project
that calls for 1) laying of an
undersea optical fibre cable from Chennai to Port Blair; and 2) the construction of an undersea
network of seabed-based surveillance sensors stretching from the tip of Sumatra
right up to Indira Point. Once completed, this network will be an integral part
of the existing US-Japan ‘Fish Hook’ sound surveillance (SOSUS) network that
will play a pivotal role in constantly monitoring all submarine patrols mounted
by China’s PLA Navy (PLAN) in both the South China Sea and the IOR. This
network will in turn be networked with the Indian Navy’s (IN) high-bandwidth National Command
Control and Communications Intelligence network (NC3I), which has been set up
under the IN’s National Maritime Domain Awareness (NMDA) project at a cost of
Rs.1,003 crores. At the heart of the NC3I is the Gurgaon-based, Rs.453 crore Information
Management and Analysis Centre (IMAC), whose systems integration software
packages were supplied by Raytheon and CISCO.
Oblique references to all these
developments were made in the joint statement that was issued last month after
the visiting US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter held delegation-level talks
with his Indian counterpart Manohar Parrikar. The joint statement spoke about: A) new opportunities to deepen cooperation
in maritime security and maritime domain awareness; B) commencement of navy-to-navy discussions on submarine safety and
anti-submarine warfare; and 3)
enhancing on-going navy-to-navy discussions to cover submarine-related issues.
The US was always interested in Japanese
and Indian locations for its SOSUS stations. Initially called Project Caesar, this involved
running cables out on continental shelves and connecting them to hydrophones
suspended above the sea bottom at optimum signal depths. An ‘experimental
station’ was established at the north-western tip of Hokkaido in 1957, with the
cable extending into the Soya (La Perouse) Strait. It monitored all Soviet
submarine traffic going in and out of Vladivostok and Nakhodka in the Sea of
Japan. Undersea surveillance systems
and associated shore-based data collection stations code-named Barrier and Bronco were
installed in Japan in the 1960s. Acoustic data collected at these sites was
transmitted by US defence communications satellites to US Navy (USN) processing
and analysis centres in the US. In
the 1970s, a network between between Japan and the Korean Peninsula was
commissioned. By 1980, three stations at Wakkanai (designated JAP-4), Tsushima
(JAP-108) and the Ryukyu Islands (RYU-80) were operational in Japan, along with
earlier stations built in the Tsushima Straits and the Okinawa area. The
existence of old cables at Horonai Point in north-west Honshu, which during the
Cold War led out to SOSUS arrays in the Sea of Japan, has been widely described
by scuba divers. By the mid-1980s
the SOSUS hydrophone arrays stretched from southern Japan to The Philippines,
covering the approaches to China. After
the collapse of the USSR and the decline of the submarine threat to the US in
the early 1990s, the USN allowed its SOSUS systems in the north-west Pacific to
atrophy, although some arrays were retained in working order so as to support
civilian scientific research (such as tracking whales and monitoring undersea
volcanic activity). According to a USN directive issued in August 1994, all seabed-based
fixed-arrays in the Pacific were placed on ‘hot standby’; personnel would ‘not
be routinely assigned to monitor fixed-array data’ unless that data was
required for operational purposes, but in practice the probability of being
able to reconstitute them to full operational status was ‘extremely low’.
However, in the early 2000s, facing an
increasing PLAN submarine force and more aggressive PLAN submarine patrols, the
USN decided that it needed a new chain of fixed arrays designed primarily to
monitor the movement of PLAN submarines between the East China Sea and South
China Sea on the one hand, and between the Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean on
the other. Thus was born the US-Japan ‘Fish
Hook Undersea Defense Line’ in
early 2005, stretching from Japan southwards to Southeast Asia, with key nodes
at Okinawa, Guam and Taiwan. Beginning from near Kagoshima in the southwest
part of Kyushu, it runs down the Osumi archipelago to Okinawa, then to
Miyako-jima and Yonaguni in the southern part of the Ryukyu Islands, past Taiwan
to the Balabac Islands in The Philippines, to Lomkok in the eastern part of the
Indonesian archipelago, across the Sunda Strait between Java and Sumatra, and
from northern Sumatra to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Three major gaps—between
Yonaguni and Suao in north-east Taiwan (120km), between Kaohsiung in
south-western Taiwan and the Dongsha (Pratas) Islands (450km) where the East
China Sea meets the South China Sea, and across the Bashi Channel (220km)
between Hengchun at Taiwan’s southernmost tip and Luzon Island in The
Philippines—were plugged. In addition, the USN installed a new SOSUS network,
stretching from Sasebo down to Okinawa, in 2006, when the US cable-laying ship
USNS Zeus operated
together with oceanographic survey vessels and nuclear submarines in this area. In July 2013, Beijing claimed that the
US and Japan had jointly established ‘very large underwater monitoring systems’
at the northern and southern ends of Taiwan. One of these stretched from
Yonaguni to the Senkaku Islands (about 150km), while the other covered the
Bashi Channel down to The Philippines. Thus, this US-Japan undersea trip-wire
around the PLAN presently extends across the Tsushima Strait between Japan and
the Korean Peninsula, and from Japan’s southern main island of Kyushu down past
Taiwan to The Philippines. The curve of the hook stretches across the Java Sea
from Kalimantan to Java, across the Sunda Strait between Java and Sumatra, and
from the northern tip of Sumatra along the eastern side of India’s Andaman and
Nicobar island chain. Real-time information-sharing
between the US and Japan joins the undersea defence line-up, effectively
drawing a tight arc around Southeast Asia, from the Andaman Sea to Japan.
China’s
Undersea Trip-Wire
The PLAN’s seabed-based surveillance network, developed jointly by Ukraine and
China since 1996, has been under installation along China's territorial waters
since 2012, with work expected to be completed later this year. The
seabed-based component of this network comprises arrays of hydrophones and
magnetic anomaly detectors spaced along undersea cables laid at the axis
of deep sound-channels roughly normal to the direction that the arrays are to
listen. This capability is next paired with maritime reconnaissance/ASW
aircraft assets to establish a multi-tier ASW network. The first naval bases to
be covered by this network were the PLAN’s submarine bases in four sites: the Bohai shipyard at Huludao on the Bohai
Sea where all nuclear-powered submarines are built; the North Sea Fleet’s Xiaopingdao
naval refit base near Dalian
where the SSBNs are fitted out for SLBM test-firings from the Bohai Sea across
China into Delingha in the Qinghai desert
and the desert of Lop Nor in Xinjiang; the North Sea Fleet’s base at
Jianggezhuang (Laoshan) approximately 18km east of Qingdao in Shandong
Province; and the South Sea Fleet’s bases at Longpo and Yulin at Yalong Bay near Sanya on
the southern tip of Hainan Island.
As far back as 2001, a researcher at the
PLAN’s Institute 715 had published a survey of ocean surveillance technologies
that included a detailed discussion of the US SOSUS programme. Later, one of
the most detailed discussions of China’s seabed-based surveillance networks
appeared in the journal Shandong Science
in 2010. However, Shandong was apparently not the only coastal area pushing
forward with R & D on seabed-based sensors. Further down south and located
near Shanghai at the mouth of large Hangzhou Bay, an ‘East Sea Ocean Floor
Observation Test Station’, also known as the Xiaoqushan Station, was discussed
extensively by Chinese researchers in an article appearing in Science Bulletin in 2011. Focussing on
the collection of a variety of oceanographic information—tidal and current
data, for example—experimentation with sonars is presently ongoing at this
station with a wireless data-collection system that was commissioned into
service in April 2009. Another analysis by several PLAN researchers in late
2012 discussed this station and military applications for its seabed-based
sensors, alongside civilian uses, including environmental protection,
navigation, and disaster prevention. The analysis compared different
configurations for seabed-based sensor networks, including linear, circular,
and tree-type designs, and also evaluating their respective cost, security and
reliability implications. It also mentioned the Xiaoqushan Station as the basis
for a larger ‘East Sea Ocean Floor Sensor Network’ that will be completed by
2016. The analysis also mentioned undersea mobile sensor stations, as well as
fixed seabed sensors.
In early 2013, China Science Daily’s March 26 edition opted to go public with the
system by publishing a feature with the banner headline: “Here They Are Quietly Listening to the Ocean: The Whole Story of the
Building of Our Country’s First Deep Sea Ocean Floor Sensor Network Base”.
According to this article, R & D efforts had commenced in 1996 and an
initial prototype of the seabed-based sensor system was tested back in 2005 in
the waters surrounding the PLAN’s base at Qingdao in Shandong Province. An
additional site was selected for the Longpo naval base, and work formally
commenced there in April 2009. Initial set-up was completed in 2010. The
undersea-sensor system has since been integrated with a larger surveillance network
that also has airborne and space-based components. Two articles appearing in
mid-2013 in the technical journal Ship Electronic
Engineering, confirmed that this network was now at an active deployment
stage. One article discussed the technical challenge of energy supply by
proposing a low-power ‘sleep-wake mode’, and mentioned the interesting additional
problem that a country’s undersea sensors are subject to being captured by an
adversary. Another article discussed the importance of advances in ‘burst
communications’ for enhancing the military value of the seabed-based sensor network.
A mid-2012 analysis in the naval magazine Modern
Ships unequivocally confirmed the existence of PLAN’s network of seabed-based
sensors. The cover-story of a second quasi-official naval journal, Naval & Merchant Ships from
mid-2013, similarly showed an acute PLAN sensitivity to its perceived vulnerability
to Western and Japanese submarines. The central concern shown there was
protecting the PLAN’s SSBNs, while the main threat vector mentioned was the USN.
Moreover, it put forward a plausible
theory of limited war in the nuclear age: “Limited war theory does not permit
the enemy country to become a target. But to win the war one must defeat the
enemy’s military forces so that the SSBN can become the ideal target.” The
article asserted that the range of PLAN’s SLBMs (the JL-2 SLBM on the Type 094
Jin-class SSBN has a range of 7,400km)
must be extended “so that one-way passage to the patrol area is shortened to
5-10 days.” At present, all PLAN-operated submarines are evaluated to be highly
vulnerable to detection from “US warships employing active sonar as well as US Navy
SSNs lurking near Chinese harbours.” To address this dire situation, the seabed-based
surveillance system is deemed critical: “Among the various ASW elements, the
seabed-based surveillance system is the foundation and heart, offering advanced
warning for the sortie of ASW aircraft and light warship escorts.” The article
continued: “The hardest part of ASW is early detection. If China can only find
the targets, PLAN’s ASW forces can then apply pressure against the activities
of US submarines, limiting their intelligence and attack capabilities.” While
this article discusses other critical ASW elements—even highlighting the role
of aircraft carriers, for example—a clear focus and conclusion of this analysis
is the priority to deploy seabed-based surveillance systems. It envisioned a
sequential process: “In order for China to build a relatively tight ASW
network, we must first [outside of all major fleet bases] construct fixed
seabed sonar arrays for continuous surveillance and control of sea areas close
to ports.” The analysis further advocates that after building a network
proximate to its naval bases, the PLAN should deploy seabed-based sonar arrays
to the west of Okinawa, to the east of Taiwan, and into the Luzon Strait.” Nor
should China’s ambitions for undersea surveillance be restricted to the “near
seas,” according to this analysis, as it suggested that more distant areas,
such as the Bay of Bengal, may be appropriate sites for future Chinese
seabed-based sonar arrays “in order to support ASW operations in those sea
areas.”
Growing Tentacles
The PLAN presently has an estimated 60 double-hulled
submarines, of which 51 are diesel-electric SSKs (two
Type 877EKM, ten Type 636, 13 Type 039 Song-class, four S-20/Type 041A
Yuan-class, four S-20/Type 041B Yuan-class and 18 Type 035 Ming-class) and
eight (four Type 091 Han-class and four Type 093 Shang-class) are nuclear-powered
SSNs. In addition, there’s one Type 092 Xia-class and two Type 094 Jin-class
SSBNs, with five more of the latter due for delivery in future. Also due for
procurement in future are 15 single-hulled SSKs (most
likely Russia’s Amur 1650-class) powered by indigenously-developed Stirling Engine
air-independent propulsion systems. The number of PLAN submarine sorties has
approximately quadrupled over the last seven years, with an average of 12 patrols
being conducted each year between 2008 and 2015, following on from six in 2007,
two 2006 none in 2005. In the Indian
Ocean region (IOR), the PLAN has so far carried out three submarine
patrols (all accompanied by Type 925/Type 926 submarine tenders), with the
submarines being kept its vessels out at sea for 95 days during each patrol.
The PLAN’s first SSN patrol within the
IOR lasted from December 3, 2013 till February 12, 2014. One Type 093 Shang-class
boat left Longpo its bastion at Yulin on December 3. Ten days later, on
December 13, the SSN reached the Gulf of Aden via the Ombai Wetar Strait near
Indonesia. It remained on patrol in the area for nearly two months. Next to follow was the Type 039 Song-class SSK ‘Great
Wall 0329’, which later docked at the China-funded Colombo
International Container Terminal in Sri Lanka from September 7 to 14, 2014 along with the Type 925-class tender 861 Changxingdao. This was followed by a patrol of a Type
091 SSN from December 13, 2014 to February 14, 2015. Next came a S-20/Type 041A Yuan-class SSK that docked at
Pakistan’s Karachi port in late May 2015, and was accompanied by a Type 925 Dajiang-class submarine tender. From
this, it can be deduced that in the years to come, the PLAN will continue with
this practice of launching at the very least two annual long-distance
patrols—one each by an SSN and SSK—into the IOR. Entry while remaining
submerged into the IOR from either the South China Sea or the Pacific Ocean
will be made through either the Lombok Strait or the Ombai Wetar Straits
astride Indonesia.
During future hostilities with either the US or India, the
most likely destinations of PLAN’s SSNs within the IOR will be the area around
Diego Garcia and the Chagos Trench. Diego Garcia
is part of the Chagos Archipelago, situated on the southernmost part of the
Chagos-Laccadive Ridge. To the east lies the Chagos Trench, a 400 mile-long
underwater canyon that ranges in depth from less than 1,000 metres to more than
5,000 metres, and the most likely area where the IN’s SSBNs will be lurking
during operational patrols.
All vessels, including
warships, enjoy the right of innocent passage through archipelagic waters.
Innocent passage requires a vessel to conduct continuous and expeditious
transit in a manner that is not prejudicial to the peace, good order or
security of the archipelagic state. For a
submarine, innocent passage means transiting on the surface, as is the case
with the Malacca Strait. But the Lombok
Strait astride Indonesia is not considered archipelagic waters, rather it is
part of an Archipelagic Sea Lane (ASL) that carves a path from Lombok in
southwest Indian Ocean, through the Flores Sea, the Makassar Strait, the
Sulawesi and Celebes Seas and on to the Pacific Ocean. It is like this because
Indonesia desires sovereignty within the archipelago beyond the normal 12nm
territorial water limit, which can be granted in relation to archipelagic
states in certain circumstances, provided the ASLs are designated. For a submarine, normal passage means
transiting submerged. The other
interesting thing about ASLs is that, unlike innocent passage through
archipelagic waters, which can be suspended temporarily on a non-discriminatory
basis, this is not the case for ASLs. Any
PLAN submarine can legally transit Lombok dived. If it chooses to loiter
illegally and then gets caught, it can feign normal passage.
Unlike the Sunda
Strait—which forms part of a separate ASL, but is realistically too shallow for
dived passage by all but the most daring/lucky of submarine operators—the Lombok
Strait is relatively deep (varying between 800 and 1,000 metres). At the
southern end of the Strait, where the channel is divided by the Island of Nusa
Penida, a shallow sill is located. Depths rise to between 200 and 250 metres in
the channel to the east of Nusa Penida. The sill
is of huge importance to the oceanographic behaviour in the Strait,
particularly since the Lombok Sea serves as one of two outlets (the other being
the Timor Passage) for a great body of warm water that flows from the Pacific
to the Indian Ocean—the so called Indonesian Throughflow. This sill, coupled with the Throughflow and tidal
flow, results in relatively large current flows, typically from north to south,
but is sometimes reversed. Current flows near the sill can reach 3.5 metres per
second during spring tide periods. In the deeper water to the north of the sill
it slows to between 0.2 to 0.5 metres. It must be noted, however, that current
velocities vary as a function of depth. The upper 100 metres carry 50% of the
total water transport through the Lombok Strait. Current velocities are,
therefore, maximum at the surface with a sharp decrease from 75 to 300 metres.
These currents are a quite significant for
submarine operations, particularly diesel-electric SSKs, which must conserve
battery life or that cannot take advantage of the deeper areas where the
current is minimal. They also create
interesting and complicated acoustic conditions for sonar on account of the
varying temperature and salinity gradients across the current-related layers.
Other Expo Updates
The Arjun Mk.2 MBT prototype displayed
at DEFEXPO 2016 hosted a new commander‘s panoramic sight developed by BEL.
The earlier Arjun Mk.1A prototype had
sported the ELBIT Systems-supplied COAPS panoramic sight.
Efforts also continue to achieve weight reductions not just for the Arjun Mk.2, but also for the T-72M1 and T-90 merdium battle tanks.
For supplying four LPHs to the Indian Navy, the competition is between the team of Fincantieri of Italy and Mazagon Docks Ltd on one hand, and Larsen & Toubro teamed up with Navantia of Spain.
Will upload several more slides in the coming days.
211 comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 201 – 211 of 211A very good analysis of russian statergy in syria
http://www.fpri.org/article/2016/01/method-madness-logic-russias-syrian-counterinsurgency-strategy/
hi prasun
Is HAL promise of shedding 1000 kg doable ?,where are they going to reduce the weight s? fitting an AESA radar an what not, ?. or is it another ploy empty promise?. YOu had mentioned that SAAB will not collaborate with HAL due to conflict of interest ?, Is there any tie up official?.Is dare competent enough to develop an ew pod to be hung externally?.
Good post! I am also going to write a blog post about this... thanks
laminar air flow manufacturers
http://swarajyamag.com/culture/how-i-deciphered-the-indus-valley-script
Here's a genuine attempt to translate the script. Gives interesting insights into origin of Sanskrit and Tamil.
The Royal Australian Navy awards the contract ( purportedly worth up to $ 50B) to DCNS to build its next-gen submarine fleet. So much for all the noise in the media about the RAN falling for the charms of the over hyped Soryu class - bullshit !
Could this also have implications for the IN's Project-75I contract ?
http://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2016/apr/26/france-to-build-australias-new-submarine-fleet-as-50bn-contract-awarded
Sir, what is the status of project-75I? Also when could we see Vikrant going for sea trails?
surprised by the aussie pick?
That news is true about DCNS being given the tender for Australia's Sea1000 future sub project. The government is also announcing OPVs, FFGs and other naval assets under its naval acquisition program - largest since World War II.
As Prasun said before instead of creating a Zoo better to use business brains and stick to one type or sub that shares commonality with the already existing ones. Australian subs will be the short fin Barracuda - cousin of the N-powered larger Barracuda.
Sir: http://www.defensenews.com/story/defense/policy-budget/budget/2016/04/09/carter-heads-out-pacific-gulf-swing/82804524/
The line I would like you to notice is: “the progress we have made together in aircraft carrier, jet fighter, and jet engine collaboration,” Carter said.
Sir, given american involvement can we see AMCA fairing better? Sorry but I am still a bit optimistic :D
Dear Prasun,
http://saudigazette.com.sa/opinion/real-definition-salmanism/
Saudi-US Virtually Divorced each other. Now US & West got new bride "IRAN". Life with new bride Iran will run for some time. Meanwhile US & West will ensure full rivalry between Saudi & Iran.
Thanks
S.Senthil Kumar
https://twitter.com/WarfareWW/status/725338157659635712
sir
why pakistan is supplying manpads to syrian rebels
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