Posted on Jul 2, 2019
CPT Jack Durish
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This opinion by Cheng Xiaonong appeared in a recent edition of the Epoch Times.

Chinese state media have recently featured heavy promotion of China’s aircraft carrier program, playing up its expansion as a means of challenging the United States for control of the seas. This strategy is in keeping with the growing assertiveness of the Chinese armed forces, as well as the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) aim to expand its geopolitical influence beyond China’s borders.

However, the CCP’s naval strategy rests on outdated thinking that isn’t backed by either historical experience or the reality of China’s financial straits. Pronouncements of China’s military rise are ultimately only likely to be useful for domestic propaganda and rallying nationalist sentiment following the breakdown of Sino–U.S. trade talks in May.

Narrative of ‘Military Rise’

On June 6, the Beijing-backed Duowei News published an article via its affiliate Duowei Magazine titled “China’s Third Aircraft Carrier Unveiled; Beijing’s Military Rise Comes to the Fore.” The piece analyzed the Party narrative about the Chinese military rise, with three important points of discussion.

Firstly, Duowei noted that past talk about China’s rise mainly focused on the economic arena, but Beijing has virtually stopped using the term “economic rise” during the bilateral talks aimed at resolving the U.S.–China trade war.

The fact that recent rhetoric in the Party media promotes Chinese military strength and not economic strength is indicative of China’s worsening predicament. The failure of Sino–U.S. trade negotiations is widely anticipated to result in a substantial U.S. tariff hike, impacting China’s economy and living standards considerably. As Premier Li Keqiang warned earlier this year, China may have to start “tightening its belt.” In this context, the state media’s rhetoric reflects a real shift in affairs.

It’s hard to avoid parallels between the Chinese navy’s current buildup and the route taken by imperial Japan leading up to the attack on

Pearl Harbor.

Second, the article discusses the CCP’s construction plan, which aims to field six to 10 carrier battle groups by “the middle of the 21st century.”

A single carrier battle group is a blue-water naval formation that includes, apart from the aircraft carrier itself, a number of supporting vessels such as large frigates, submarines, oil tankers, and other supply ships, as well as a variety of naval combat and support aircraft. At present, only the United States possesses the wherewithal to support multiple carrier groups, which indicates that the Communist Party intends to build up the Chinese military to match or surpass U.S. strength.

The article’s third topic turns to the goal of realigning countries in the South China Sea region to stand with China, not the United States. “Having undergone modern-day colonial wars and the two world wars, the South China Sea countries have completely turned their backs on China for security, instead relying on the United States,” the article stated, in an echo of Beijing’s nationalistic propaganda.

Modern Realities of Aircraft Carrier Strategy

Historically, the era of large-scale naval combat between multiple carrier fleets began and ended with the Pacific theater of World War II. That war saw the complete destruction of the imperial Japanese fleet, leaving the United States uncontested in the aircraftcarrier department. Today, the role of U.S. carriers has shifted. It now is mainly a tool for force projection, not just because there is no other world power with a significant carrier fleet to go up against, but also because modern weapons and electronic warfare systems vastly reduce the effectiveness

of largescale naval warfare.

Carriers today are highly vulnerable to a variety of threats, such as long-range anti-ship missiles and submarines. The era of fighting fleet-to-fleet battles with carrierbased strike aircraft is long past. In modern naval combat, an aircraft carrier depends far more on the effectiveness of electronic countermeasures for its protection. The United States alone has maintained large numbers of carrier groups due to its having assumed responsibility for global security and order in the post-World War II era.

In sum, while the Chinese regime’s plan to build six to 10 carrier battle groups in the coming decades seems like a bold show of force, the thinking behind it suffers fundamental flaws.

Who Benefits From Chinese Saber Rattling?

China’s carrier fleet has a long way to go before it lives up to the CCP’s military goals. The two ships currently deployed with the People’s Liberation Army Navy are still in the phase of gaining basic operational experience, and they lack the equipment to perform longdistance oceangoing missions.

The Hong Kong-based Asia Times reported in a June 5 article that the 001A, China’s first domestically built carrier, requires 13,000 tons of fuel to operate at full load. It consumes 1,100 tons daily when cruising at 20 knots, and 1,500 if in the so-called war state. This is due to the increased sailing speed the carrier needs in order to provide sufficient lift for its planes to take off.

Further, the 001A also has the duty of refueling the six to eight destroyers and frigates in the accompanying formation. Under these circumstances, the entire carrier group can only spend four full days in operations at sea before returning to Hong Kong for resupply. Its realistic area of activity is confined to the South China Sea, making it unable to carry out missions in the eastern Pacific or Indian oceans.

Thus, Beijing still has many limitations to overcome before its planned six to 10 carrier groups can become a viable challenge to U.S. command of the seas.

It’s hard to avoid parallels between the Chinese navy’s current buildup and the route taken by imperial Japan leading up to the attack on Pearl Harbor. The United States keenly remembers the early days of the Pacific War and its arduous struggle with the Imperial Japanese Navy. Such experiences have made the U.S. armed forces highly vigilant against developing threats.

Considering the unlikelihood of China being able to compete with the United States in either fielding carriers or in developing the experience and technology needed to win a carrier war, what practical benefit could the CCP hope to derive from such a costly construction plan? Here we can take another page from the imperial Japanese experience: To compete for funding, prestige, and promotions, IJN admirals manufactured conflicts and set unrealistic strategic goals. They goaded Japan into war and led it to its ultimate defeat.

Today, those in charge of the Chinese armed forces dream about their rise as a military power regardless of its actual feasibility, and the Party, bent on international hegemony, is ready to oblige. But in the face of prolonged economic downturn, China doesn’t have the financial ability to fuel these military dreams. Ultimately, such narratives serve mainly as fodder for domestic nationalism, and to those who wish to stoke Chinese nationalist sentiments, the feasibility and consequences of the country’s “military rise” are of little concern. Cheng Xiaonong is a scholar of China’s politics and economy based in New Jersey. Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

Cheng Xiaonong (simplified Chinese: 程晓农; traditional Chinese: 程曉農; pinyin: Chéng Xiǎonóng; born 1950s) is an officer in People's Republic of China. Cheng was born in Shanghai in 1950s. After middle school, Cheng was sent to Feidong County to work as a farmer. In 1975, Cheng worked in Anhui Geologic Branch (安徽省地质局).
Posted in these groups: China ChinaStrategy globe 1cfii4y Strategy
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Responses: 3
MAJ Ken Landgren
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China is using economic means for imperialistic purposes. They will often invest billions of loans too poor countries who probably can't make the payments. By a country defaulting, the Chinese government will initiate a contractual agreement and will get the rights to important infrastructure. Third world countries are notorious for bribery. Leaders will succumb to bribes at the expense of their countries.

I believe missiles with significantly greater ranges will be a Revolution in Military Affairs. It will increase the stand off distances for the navies around the world.
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Devansh Chaurasiya
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we must at any cost avoid war ..but yes Not only China but even other part is also intimidating .... we need more peacemakers and military I think are the best people to deliver this message of love and peace
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SGM Bill Frazer
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I don't think its a direct challenge, but it goes along way against their neighbors in the South Sea, and when added to the fact that they are building their own island in the sea- it will ntense support for the CVA option.
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