China’s growing submarine fleet: A threat to the US Navy?
The past two decades have seen the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) as the Chinese military is known, undergo significant modernization programs. While these programs have primarily focused on land-based assets, they have begun to improve aviation assets as well. More recently, the naval arm of the PLA (the PLAN) has begun a serious campaign of upgrade and expansion. For a nation primarily concerned with projecting power into the sea—specifically the South and East China Seas—this is a necessary step. For those nations interested in countering these advances, these programs are quite alarming.
While most of the focus of the PLAN’s growth has been on its surface fleet, which now exceeds the U.S. fleet in number of ships by 370 to 299, with that number expected to grow further, less attention has been paid to undersea advances. In both type and quantity, the PLAN has begun to improve its submarine fleet while also making it more difficult for U.S. ships and submarines to operate. This expansion represents a threat to the U.S. Navy in three distinct and interrelated ways: it increases the danger posed to U.S. ships, makes it far more challenging for U.S. subs to carry out their roles in a potential conflict, and it spreads the already thin resources of the U.S. Navy even further.
In order to assess how the PLAN’s subsurface community is stepping up the pressure on the U.S. Navy, it is illustrative to look at the specific advances that it is taking. These are, namely: new submarine designs in all classes, improved production capacity and a “Great Underwater Wall” and improved listening for surface vessels
An overview of new submarines
Two years ago, reports emerged that China had fielded a new fast attack submarine, a variant of the Type 039 Yuan class. This C variant features a distinctive sail shape, reducing its acoustic signatures by several decibels. Potentially more significant, however, is the fact that it became operational only a year or so after launching, which is unusually fast for a new class of submarine. In addition to the new Yuan variant, China has just fielded the Type 095 and is working on the Type 096, ballistic missile submarines. While these are still in their infancy—relatively speaking—they represent important steps forward. Experts believe they will be as quiet as the Russian Akula-class. Furthermore, they are larger than current Chinese missile subs; the Type 095 has sixteen vertical launch tubes and the Type 096 is expected to have twenty-four. Miniaturization programs have shrunk the size of Chinese submarine-launched missiles meaning the new subs won’t have quite as large of a “turtle back” as seen on the Type 094 which will yield a marked increase in performance.
Currently, the United States and China have near parity in terms of their number of submarines. This number is forecasted to rapidly shift, however, as the PLAN ramps up its production. As evidenced by the new Type 039C, it is already adept at quickly getting subs from the yards to the fleet. Expansions in a major yard in Wuhan mean China will be able to pump out subs at a rate the United States and other nations will most likely be unable to match.
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