The U.S. Navy continues to debate the issue of
just how effective non-nuclear submarines would be in wartime, and whether the U.S.
should buy some of these non-nuclear boats itself. This radical proposal is
based on two compelling factors. First, the U.S. Navy may not get enough money
to maintain a force of 40-50 SSNs (attack subs.) Second, the quietness of
modern diesel-electric boats puts nuclear subs at a serious disadvantage,
especially in coastal waters. With modern passive sensors, a submerged
diesel-electric sub is often the best weapon for finding and destroying other diesel-electric
boats. While the nuclear sub is the most effective high seas vessel,
especially if you have worldwide responsibilities and these nukes would have to
quickly move long distances to get to the troubled waters, the diesel electric
boat, operating on batteries in coastal waters, is quieter and harder to find.
There are 39 nations operating a total of 400 diesel
electric subs. Only three of these nations (China,
Iran, North
Korea) are likely to use their subs against
the U.S. or its
allies. China has
fifty of these boats, Iran
has three (plus 25 much smaller mini-subs) and North
Korea has 20 (plus 50 much smaller
mini-subs). So the U.S.
has to worry about 73 diesel electric subs and 75 mini-subs. But about half the
full size subs are elderly, obsolete and noisy. The same can be said for at
least half the mini-subs. That leaves about 36 full size subs and 40 mini-subs
that are a clear threat (and the older stuff can be a threat if you get
sloppy.) That’s a lot of subs, and they make the East Asian coast and the Persian
Gulf dangerous places for American warships.
For much of the past decade the U.S. Navy has been trying to
get an idea of just how bad the threat it. Thus from 2005 to 2007 the United
States leased a Swedish sub (Sweden
only has five subs in service), and its crew, to help American anti-submarine
forces get a better idea of what they were up against. This Swedish boat was a
"worst case" scenario, an approach that is preferred for training.
The Gotland class Swedish subs involved are small (1,500
tons, 64.5 meters/200 feet long) and have a crew of only 25. The Gotland
was based in San Diego, along with
three dozen civilian technicians to help with maintenance.
For many years before the Gotland
arrived, the U.S. Navy had trained against Australian diesel-electric subs, and
often came out second. The Gotland has one advantage
over the Australian boats, because of its AIP system (which allows it to stay
under water, silently, for several weeks at a time). Thus the Gotland
is something of a worst case in terms of what American surface ships and
submarines might have to face in a future naval war. None of America's
most likely naval opponents (China,
North Korea or Iran),
have AIP boats yet, but they do have plenty of diesel-electric subs which, in
the hands of skilled crews, can be pretty deadly.
Based on the experience with Australian and Swedish subs,
the U.S. Navy has been developing new anti-submarine tactics and equipment. All
this is done in secret, obviously. But apparently the modern, quiet diesel
electric boats continue to be a major threat to U.S.
surface warships and subs. Meanwhile, potential enemies build more of their
cheaper and higher quality, diesel-electric boats, and train their crews by
having them stalk actual warships (including U.S.
ones.) The subs are getting more numerous, while U.S.
defenses are limping along because of the sheer technical problems of finding
quiet diesel-electric boats in coastal waters.
One reason China
wants to keep American naval forces out of their economic zone (which does not
bar foreign warships) is so that Chinese diesel electric subs can train without
being stalked by American subs, surface ships and aircraft looking for
realistic practice tracking Chinese boats. At the same time the U.S. Navy has
lost the full use of its most effective underwater anti-submarine training area
(a well mapped and instrumented area off southern California)
because environmentalist activists have convinced judges that the use of active
sonar in this training area is harmful to some species of aquatic animals.
Moreover, the North Korean and Iranian fleets (and
governments) are in decline while China
is pouring more cash into their armed forces. If there’s any diesel-electric
boats the U.S. Navy has to be extremely concerned about, it’s the Chinese.
While China
continues to try and develop world class nuclear subs, they are also moving
head in creating world class diesel electric boats.
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