Davy
Jones’s Locker
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
DIGG THIS
Last week,
for three days running, the Washington Times carried front-page
stories about the interception of a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier,
the Kitty Hawk, by a Chinese submarine. The submarine, a Song-class
diesel-electric boat, popped up undetected in the middle of a carrier
battle group, which was operating in deep water off Okinawa. Armed
with Russian-made wake-homing torpedo’s that can ruin a carrier’s
day, the sub was well within range of the Kitty Hawk when it surfaced.
While the Washington
Times headline read "Admiral says sub risked a shootout,"
the incident meant little in itself. Navies play these kinds of
"Gotcha!" games with each other all the time; both U.S.
and Soviet subs were quite good at it during the Cold War. Since
neither the U.S. nor China is seeking war, there was no danger of
a naval Marco Polo Bridge Incident. The paper quoted an unidentified
U.S. Navy official as saying, correctly, "We were operating
in international waters, and they were operating in international
waters. From that standpoint, nobody was endangering anybody. Nobody
felt threatened."
There are,
still, some lessons here. One is that, contrary to the U.S. Navy’s
fervent belief, the aircraft carrier is no longer the capital ship.
It ceded that role long ago to the submarine. In one naval exercise
after another, the sub sinks the carriers. The carriers just pretend
it didn’t happen and carry on with the rest of the exercise.
About thirty
years ago, my first boss, Senator Robert Taft Jr. of Ohio, asked
Admiral Hyman Rickover how long he thought the U.S. aircraft carriers
would last in the war with the Soviet navy, which was largely a
submarine navy. Rickover’s answer, on the record in a hearing of
the Senate Armed Services Committee, was, "About two days."
The Committee, needless to say, went on to approve buying more carriers.
Another lesson
is that diesel-electric subs can be as effective or more effective
than nuclear boats in the same situations. The U.S. Navy hates the
very idea of non-nuclear submarines and therefore pretends they
don’t count for much. You can buy four to eight modern diesel-electric
submarines for the cost of a single American "U-cruiser"
nuke boat.
At this point,
the Chinese sub’s successful interception of our carrier does raise
an interesting question: how was that sub in the right position
to make an interception? What a nuclear submarine can do but a diesel-electric
sub cannot is undertake a along, high-speed chase. Was it just dumb
luck the Chinese sub was where we were in effect ran into it? Or
were the Chinese able to coordinate the sub’s movement over time
with successful tracking of our carrier battle group? If the latter
is the case, the Chinese Navy may be starting to become a real navy
instead of just a collection of ships. That transformation is far
more important than whether China has this or that piece of equipment.
It won’t happen fast, but it bears watching.
Or does it?
The somewhat regrettable message from the world of real war, Fourth
Generation war, is that deep-water battles or prospective battles
between navies mean little if anything. Speculating about the balance
between U.S. Navy aircraft carriers and Chinese submarines is like
wondering what would happen at Trafalgar if Villeneuve’s van had
responded immediately to his signal to wear and support the center
of the Allies’ line, or Admiral Gravina had led his Squadron of
Observation straight for Collingwood’s column. It’s fun to think
about – personally, I enjoyed it immensely – but c’est ne pas
la guerre. Control of coastal and inland waters may play highly
important roles in Fourth Generation war, but deep water naval battles
like the Glorious First of June, if they occur, will be jousting
contests, with broomsticks. In real war, the U.S. Coast Guard may
be more useful than the U.S. Navy.
That is the
real lesson of the Chinese sub incident: the U.S. navy, like the
U.S. Air Force, without a torpedo fired or a single dogfight, is
on its way to Davy Jones’s Locker through sheer intellectual inanition.
Preparing endlessly for another carrier war in the Pacific against
the Imperial Japanese navy, it has become a historical artifact.
In
the late 19th century, the Chinese people, outraged by
repeated foreign humiliations of China, took up a sizeable collection
of money to build China a modern navy. The Dowager Empress used
the funds to build a marble pleasure boat for herself in the lake
near her summer palace. The U.S. Navy’s carrier battle groups are
the marble pleasure boats of the House and Senate Armed Services
Committees of the U.S. Congress.
November
22, 2006
William
Lind [send him mail]
is an analyst based in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2006 William S. Lind
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