Title: Keeping up with the neighbours
1Keeping up with the neighbours Submarine fleets
in the Asia-Pacific and Australias
response Andrew Davies, Director Operations
Capability Program, Australian Strategic Policy
Institute
2OVERVIEW
- Asia-Pacific submarine plans platforms and
weapons - Reasons for the proliferation of submarines
- Responses to the submarine population explosion
- Australias submarine fleet now and the future
3 4Asia-Pac submarines
- There are several reasons for the proliferation
of submarines in - the Asia-Pacific region
- General military development resulting from
economic strength - Strategic competition between established and
rising powers - Local arms competitions
- Canny marketing
5Asia-Pac submarines
- Differing approaches to submarine acquisition
reflects the industrial,economic and strategic
weight of the owner countries. - Would-be major powers India and China have
nuclear submarine programs (and Russia is
rebuilding) as well as buying OTS - Middle powers Japan, ROK and Australia build
large conventional boats - Smaller powers buy European boats OTS
6Asia-Pac submarines
- Depending on the strategic alignment of
countries, their submarine weaponstend to follow
either US or Russian philosophies. - Countries aligned with the US deploy subsonic
ASMs in the Harpoon/Exocet class - India, China and Russia are acquiring supersonic
sea skimming cruise missiles
7PLA(N)
- Partly an asymmetric response to USN power and
partly accompanying amajor buildup of military
power. Several active programs - SSBNs to provide a nuclear second strike option
- SSNs for long range blue water operations and
hunter/killer ops - A revamped diesel-electric fleet that could
operate in littoral environments and could
create real problems in the Taiwan Strait - An ASW capability
8Response to submarines
- ASW must become a higher priority for western
navies, especially against diesel-electric
submarines - Intelligence on indigenous capabilities
required - Discussions between USN and PLA(N) regarding
protocols post USS Kittyhawk (and EP-3)
incidents - Smaller navies would be well advised to develop
protocols to avoid incidents/collisions in
narrow waterways.
9Australias submarine fleet now and the future
Collins class 6 SSGs _at_ 3,300 tonnes
submerged Size driven by ranges
required ability to maintain 2 boats on station
at 2,500 nm was key driver Built by Australian
Submarine Corporation based on Kockums design
10Australias submarine fleet now and the future
Many well publicised project issues -
noise - combat system - leaks - diesels -
propellers
11 12Australias submarine fleet now and the future
The COLLINS has now matured into a reliable
platform - Same combat system as the USN
Virginia class (Raytheon AN/BYG-1 Combat
Control System) - Mk 48 ADCAP torpedo and
Harpoon ASM - Some hulls fitted for SF
operations Issues with manning levels and some
questions about availability.
13Australias submarine fleet now and the future
Planning for the submarine beyond Collins has
just begun (formally) Big picture
considerations Geography has not changed
distances are large Numbers matter is six
boats enough for defensive and offensive
ops? Two new LHDs to join RAN in 2013-2015 Cost
of Australian-built solution vs MOTS (ASC to
build almost given)
14Australias submarine fleet now and the future
- Design considerations
- Range and endurance calls for 2 boats on
station at 3,500nm - gt 4,000 tonne boat (!)
- A nuclear boat is most unlikely
- Weapons payload
- AIP
- UUVs
- ASC will require assistance to develop these
boats
15 Questions?