New Study Warns Aircraft Carriers May Be Obsolete (Thanks to Russia and China)
Inexpensive Russian and Chinese weapons, such as cyberwar and
antiship missiles, threaten the West’s reliance on expensive arms such
as aircraft carriers.
“China and Russia appear to have focused many (but not all) their
efforts on being able to put at risk the key Western assets that are
large, few in number and expensive,” reads a recent study by the Royal United Services Institute, a British military think tank.
“Western
governments have become acutely aware of the problems of this financial
imbalance in the counterinsurgency context, when they found themselves
using weapons costing $70,000, sometimes fired from aircraft that cost
$30,000 an hour to fly, to destroy a Toyota pick-up vehicle that might
be optimistically valued at $10,000,” the report went on. “Missiles
costing (much) less than half a million pounds [$642,000] a unit could
at least disable a British aircraft carrier that costs more than £3
billion [$3.9 billion]. Indeed, a salvo of ten such missiles would cost
less than $5 million.”
The British report is in response to America’s Third Offset Strategy,
the Pentagon’s search for ways to maintain U.S. military superiority
amid the rise of asymmetric warfare. The ability of a missile or a
computer virus to destroy or disable expensive Cold War–era weapons like
aircraft carriers or tanks, or the satellites and computer networks
that support them, has left U.S. planners grappling with how to devise
new capabilities while rendering older weapons less vulnerable.
But what makes the RUSI report particularly interesting is the nation
that authored it. With one-twelfth the defense budget of the United
States, Britain can’t afford to lavish money on numerous projects like
their cousins across the pond do. So, by necessity, the British study
offers a particularly clear-eyed view of the situation.
For example, RUSI points out that the current situation should come
as no surprise. The United States fielded stealth aircraft and cruise
missiles more than twenty-five years ago. “It would be naive to expect
that Russia and China are not where leading NATO states were three
decades ago.”
Nor can the West count on technological superiority. American and
British armed forces are configured to fight overseas, in expeditionary
forces or in support of or allies. In contrast, Russia and China have
chosen to focus on fighting near their home borders, such as eastern
Europe or the South China Sea. “Thus, although the US spends much more
on defence technology development than its potential adversaries, its
better technology does not necessarily translate to proportionate
military advantage in a specific theatre,” RUSI notes.
The RUSI study suggests that Britain—and implicitly the United
States—adopt a four-pronged approach it calls Tolerate, Treat, Transform
and Terminate. The first three refer to maintaining the capability of
current weapons, upgrading current weapons to meet future threats and
developing entirely new technologies.
However, the last option—what RUSI calls Terminate—is the most
explosive. It essentially means getting rid of weapons that can no
longer perform effectively in combat, yet can’t or are too expensive to
upgrade. “The judgement here will be whether it is the most
cost-effective means to deliver that effect, or whether a less
sophisticated capability might be more appropriate,” RUSI says. “Second,
while desirable, the capability could be rapidly reconstituted should
the need arise.”
The RUSI report carefully refrains from naming specific weapons that
might need to be eliminated. But given the study’s conclusion that
Russian and Chinese weapons now threaten Western reliance on a small
number of sophisticated and irreplaceable platforms, the large aircraft
carriers beloved by the U.S. Navy would seem to be at the top of the
list.
This option “is understandably the most difficult, requiring an
alignment of stakeholder interests and decisive action,” RUSI admits.
It’s also easier for Britain than the United States: the British are
unlikely to confront an adversary such as Russia or China alone, without
Western and especially U.S. forces that can provide capabilities that
Britain can’t. It’s the Americans who need to be able to provide the
muscle and the lift.
Nonetheless, perhaps it takes a former great power like Britain,
fading gracefully from center stage in the global arena, to admit
reality.
Michael Peck is a contributing writer for the National Interest. He can be found on Twitter and Facebook.
Image: ATLANTIC
OCEAN (July 6, 2017) Sailors conduct pre-flight checks on an F/A-18E
Super Hornet assigned to the Gunslingers of Strike Fighter Squadron
(VFA) 105 on the flight deck aboard the aircraft carrier USS Dwight D.
Eisenhower (CVN 69)(Ike). Ike is underway during the sustainment phase
of the Optimized Fleet Response Plan (OFRP).
No comments:
Post a Comment