Over at War on the Rocks, they've posted DEPSECDEF Work's talk at CNAS from the other day. You can watch it here:
I posted a comment to the War on the Rocks piece, which I reproduce here:
"Bob Work is a great American and the essential man in the Pentagon. I look forward to seeing what he and Dr. Carter can do together. But I have great reservations about “Third Offset” that spring from two main areas….technology and mass.
Secretary Work rightly makes the distinction between the circumstances underpinning technology today and the situation in the previous “Offsets”, the most important of which is the degree to which the technological drivers have shifted to the commercial sector. But what he fails to follow that up with is the second big shift from the past, and that is that these commercial technological advances are increasingly not made by American firms. Technology has internationalized, and the erosion in our technological leadership that the Secretary speaks of is unlikely to be reversed as long as innovation is occurring throughout the world, and especially with potential allies. Yes, China is stealing a lot of technology. I get it. But they aren’t stealing all of it. Their own R and D efforts are churning out successes at a noticeable clip.
The second reservation I have is the degree to which we whistle past the graveyard on the concept of mass-or capacity. We have become enamored with the “one bomb one target” mentality that grew out of the combination of the precision guided munition revolution and the fall of the Soviet Union, and we have fought wars in the past twenty years against second and third rate opponents who could not protect their valued assets. This will NOT be the case in high end war against a peer competitor. There will have to be a combination of precision and mass, yet we only seem to talk about/fund the former, while our Service Secretaries and Service Chiefs wistfully talk about favoring capability over capacity. The bottom line is that great power dynamics are back in fashion, and we need to begin to think about how such wars would be waged. Russia in Crimea and China in the South China Sea are NOT STRATEGIC ISSUES. The strategic issues all come from great power dynamics and the potential for great power war. We need to think less about how to deter China from its adventurism in SCS and more about how to conduct and win a global war with against them. We need to worry less about what Putin’s next land grab will be and more about how to convince Europe that Russia — at least this Russia — is a candidate for a new brand of containment.
But these big questions are inconvenient to talk about, and certainly inconvenient to plan for. Why? Because they are expensive. Because in order to actually resource to prepare for such wars, we cannot continue to spend what we currently do on defense. When Eisenhower initiated the “First offset”, defense was getting over 60% of the Federal budget. When Carter initiated the second, defense was getting 30% of the budget. Defense currently comprises significantly under 20%. Which brings me to my final objection to “Third Offset”.
Third Offset has the stench of decline about it. Although Secretary Work speaks of no silver bullets, what he’s actually looking for are SEVERAL silver bullets. This is because we as a nation have not thought seriously enough about what a long war with a peer competitor would take, and so we salve our consciences with references to our great past and our ability to harness technology and innovation to our own purposes. We’ll do that because we aren’t prepared to spend what is necessary to back up that technology with mass, or capacity. We have resigned ourselves to flat or declining budgets, to budgets which increasingly are less of both the national budget and our nation’s GDP, while we worship at the altar of technology to save us from our own strategic blindness.
There is a lot to like in Third Offset-I certainly want to double down on WHATEVER capability and technology advantages we have. But we cannot pin our hopes solely on what might be considered a true “wasting asset”, and that is our leadership in technology. If we want to remain the world’s dominant power, if we want to continue to enjoy the benefits of our current position in the world, we’re going to have to consider spending more than 3.5% of our national wealth each year to maintain and extend those positions."
Bryan McGrath
Saturday, January 31, 2024
Third Offset Reservations....Some Thoughts on Deputy Secretary of Defense Work's Speech
I am a forty-something year-old graduate of the University of Virginia. I spent a career on active duty in the US Navy, including command of a destroyer. During that time, I kept my political views largely to myself. Those days are over.
Friday, January 30, 2024
The P-8 Poseidon and Offensive Anti-Surface Warfare
Late
last month, the CIMSEC NextWar blog carried an excellent post by LT Michael
Glynn, a Naval Aviator from the Maritime Patrol and Reconnaissance community,
on the potential
utility of introducing a long-range anti-ship missile capability in the new P-8
Poseidon. LT Glynn observes that though the P-8 is armed with the legacy
Harpoon Block IC anti-ship cruise missile and slated to receive the Harpoon
Block II, both weapons lack the range to provide the aircraft with much
standoff distance from its prey. This standoff deficit is problematic, as a P-8
tasked with performing a Harpoon engagement would be placed at undue risk if it
faced adversary ships that either carried long-range Surface to Air Missiles
(SAM) or were operating under the defensive coverage provided by land-based
SAMs or fighters.
LT
Glynn also points out that the Navy already plans to use the P-8 to provide
over-the-horizon targeting support to other anti-ship missile-armed platforms.
This is logical, as the P-8’s onboard radar is capable of classifying a surface
contact’s type from some distance away using its Inverse
Synthetic Aperture Radar (ISAR) imaging mode.
LT
Glynn therefore argues the Poseidon would serve as a superb platform for the
Navy’s planned Long Range Anti-Ship Missile (LRASM). He notes that the P-8’s
combat radius and endurance, speed, and potential ability to confound an
adversary’s anti-airbase targeting apparatus by engaging in dispersed flight
operations from developed auxiliary airbases would make it a formidable
anti-ship asset if armed with the >200nm
LRASM.
I
have no personal position on whether any particular future anti-ship missile should be
integrated with P-8; I'll leave the operational and technical analyses on that to the professionals. He is
absolutely correct, though, that the P-8 could provide significant additional
offensive airborne anti-surface capability to a theater commander. This would be especially true during
periods in which the available aircraft carriers in theater (or long-range land-based bombers for that matter) are tasked with higher-priority missions. Of course, this assumes the U.S. could secure air superiority in P-8 operating areas.
I
also want to point out that the P-8’s electro-optical sensors might be just as
valuable as its radar for providing over-the-horizon targeting support to other
platforms. I’ve long argued
that visual classification of contacts will be necessary to have high
confidence that scarce long-range guided weapons are not being wasted against
decoys. Even
ISAR can, in theory, be susceptible to electronic countermeasures. Consequently, the greater the
range at which a P-8 can visually classify a contact under supportive
environmental conditions, the higher the potential value of its targeting
picture. This range would likely not be great enough for a P-8 to perform
visual classification at a safe standoff range from a well-defended ship, however. As a result, the Poseidon would only be able to independently perform the task at low risk if
the adversary’s defenses were either relatively short-ranged or could be readily suppressed.
This
highlights the need for visual-range targeting support by a fairly survivable
(or expendable) scout further forward, especially in locations where the adversary possesses air superiority. Indeed, even a P-8 armed with an
extended range anti-ship weapon would benefit from the tactical picture relayed
by such a scout.
The views expressed herein are solely those of the
author and are presented in his personal capacity. They do not reflect the
official positions of Systems Planning and Analysis, and to the author’s
knowledge do not reflect the policies or positions of the U.S. Department of
Defense, any U.S. armed service, or any other U.S. Government agency.
Wednesday, January 28, 2024
The Future of Naval Warfare is Swarming, or… Distribute Everything
A few weeks
ago, two esteemed navalists debated the future of the nuclear-powered aircraft
carrier at the U.S. Naval Academy. To provide an overly-simplistic summation of
this debate, retired Navy Captain and think-tank fellow Jerry Hendrix believes
that the days of super carriers should be numbered in favor of more (affordable) platforms, such as
large-deck amphibious ships, missile carrying submarines, and future
semi-submersibles embarking unmanned vehicles. But fellow ID poster Bryan McGrath
argues that supercarriers - more (capable)
platforms - will continue to provide value and versatility in future
conflicts. They were both correct - to an extent. CVNs have proven their value in war and peace
since their inception and will continue to serve the fleet proudly for decades. But they are expensive, and getting more
unaffordable with every iteration. Bryan notes that despite its extravagant cost, a carrier represents a mere rounding error in the overall federal budget. Though true, this wishful thinking doesn't make a larger fleet any closer reality than it has been since the heady days of the (almost) 600 ship navy.
Our super-carrier fleet has shrunk from 14 to essentially 10 over the course of a quarter-century. Nuclear carriers, the centerpiece of today’s fleet, can only be in one place at one time. Fewer carriers means less forward deployed presence. Jerry has favored a fleet of more numerous and affordable "Fords" over pricier "Ferraris" for years now, and it is his vision that more closely matches the direction of future war at sea - distributed operations and swarming.
Our super-carrier fleet has shrunk from 14 to essentially 10 over the course of a quarter-century. Nuclear carriers, the centerpiece of today’s fleet, can only be in one place at one time. Fewer carriers means less forward deployed presence. Jerry has favored a fleet of more numerous and affordable "Fords" over pricier "Ferraris" for years now, and it is his vision that more closely matches the direction of future war at sea - distributed operations and swarming.
I first wrote about swarms here about three years ago. My thinking on this concept has evolved as the U.S. Navy has now begun research and development on unmanned air and surface
swarming technology in earnest. Increasing portions of the research portfolios at DARPA, ONR, and the Naval Postgraduate school are focused on autonomy and swarming.
Defining the New Swarm
First, some history is order. In some respects, the aircraft carrier was the platform that originally brought swarming to modern naval warfare - though one could look back somewhat further to the triremes of antiquity for tactics that somewhat resemble swarming. In World War II, dozens of U.S. and Japanese fleet carriers operated across the Western Pacific, carrying hundreds of aircraft that swarmed to attack and defend enemy surface ships and island bases. Future swarming will occur at both the tactical and operational levels. Though with projected force structure, surging three, maybe four carriers at any time to a given theater is going to be a challenge. Discounting casualties (a big assumption), maintaining them forward deployed over the course of a protracted naval campaign would be virtually impossible. So how will tomorrow's smaller fleet be able to project power - both ashore and at sea across battle areas spanning millions of square miles in a major war?
Defining the New Swarm
First, some history is order. In some respects, the aircraft carrier was the platform that originally brought swarming to modern naval warfare - though one could look back somewhat further to the triremes of antiquity for tactics that somewhat resemble swarming. In World War II, dozens of U.S. and Japanese fleet carriers operated across the Western Pacific, carrying hundreds of aircraft that swarmed to attack and defend enemy surface ships and island bases. Future swarming will occur at both the tactical and operational levels. Though with projected force structure, surging three, maybe four carriers at any time to a given theater is going to be a challenge. Discounting casualties (a big assumption), maintaining them forward deployed over the course of a protracted naval campaign would be virtually impossible. So how will tomorrow's smaller fleet be able to project power - both ashore and at sea across battle areas spanning millions of square miles in a major war?
Japan’s kamikaze attacks were another early form of naval swarming. By some estimates, the Divine Wind suicide attacks accounted for up to 80 percent of U.S. Navy
losses in the final phase of the Pacific war. Although they were lethally effective, the lives of thousands of pilots sacrificed to execute these attacks accelerated the attrition of the Japanese war machine that ultimately led to its defeat.
In the past
decade, the Iranian fast attack craft swarming threat has driven significant discussion in U.S. Navy circles, ranging from grave concern to outright dismissal. To address these sorts of threats, the Navy has acquired and deployed various countermeasures, such the LCS/FF surface package and USS Ponce’s laser system. Developing hardware to counter swarming isn’t enough. Iran’s multi-pronged sea denial threat illustrates some of the aspects of future naval swarms that will be emulated by other potential adversaries and friendly navies alike.
Despite our best attempts, future enemies and conflict drivers are difficult to predict. But it is likely that increasingly affordable and numerous autonomous systems will make swarming a common tactic in the future, employed by both state and non-state maritime powers. I strongly recommend Paul Scharre's work to understand the nature of military swarms and how they might be employed. What follows are some thoughts on how swarms might work in the naval milieu.
Despite our best attempts, future enemies and conflict drivers are difficult to predict. But it is likely that increasingly affordable and numerous autonomous systems will make swarming a common tactic in the future, employed by both state and non-state maritime powers. I strongly recommend Paul Scharre's work to understand the nature of military swarms and how they might be employed. What follows are some thoughts on how swarms might work in the naval milieu.
Naval swarms require numbers.
A swarm is designed to overwhelm targeting systems and magazine capacity with its size. Unlike the Japanese kamikazes, low cost, unmanned autonomous platforms will alleviate any qualms about mass human casualties on the side of the swarmers.
A swarm is designed to overwhelm targeting systems and magazine capacity with its size. Unlike the Japanese kamikazes, low cost, unmanned autonomous platforms will alleviate any qualms about mass human casualties on the side of the swarmers.
By employing distributed maritime operations, a single surface platform with embarked unmanned vehicles can operate over a wider area than one without. Using a multi-tiered hub-and-spoke concept, a large surface ship should be capable of simultaneously operating dozens of air, surface, and sub-surface vessels. So while a traditional surface ship might operate a boat or two and the same number of helicopters, using unmanned vehicles, that same platform can deploy numerous sensors and weapons at a considerable distance from the ship across all maritime domains.
![]() |
Herd. Defend. Distract. Attack. |
So
what sort of platforms will compose future naval swarms? Increasingly, miniaturization and unmanned systems will allow smaller platforms to enjoy the the plug-and-play payload versatility that Bryan rightly argues make the super-carrier so valuable. Somewhere between today's high end fleet and tomorrow's nano-swarms are distributed naval operations.
Existing and planned surface combatants
Though high in quality, today's fleet is smaller in quantity than needed for future distributed operations. Although a "thousand ship" multi-national navy has possible utility in peacetime, what happens in time of war, when partners go wobbly? I have advocated for distributed operations at sea to include distributed firepower for about five years now. So it warmed my heart to see surface warfare leadership take an interest in distributed lethality in a recent Proceedings article and in subsequent public comments.
Though high in quality, today's fleet is smaller in quantity than needed for future distributed operations. Although a "thousand ship" multi-national navy has possible utility in peacetime, what happens in time of war, when partners go wobbly? I have advocated for distributed operations at sea to include distributed firepower for about five years now. So it warmed my heart to see surface warfare leadership take an interest in distributed lethality in a recent Proceedings article and in subsequent public comments.
Future warfare will require more than just a new generation of weapons onboard planned combatants. The LCS/FF and SSC, warts and all,
will be critically important, given their numbers and versatility at carrying
various payloads. By adapting
smaller unmanned payloads, each ship will be able to launch a mini-swarm. These platforms will aggregate and disperse
as the tactical situation dictates. Of
course, carriers and large deck amphibious ships will remain valuable for the
foreseeable future, simply because of their massive capacity to carry smaller
vehicles. Additionally, the vision of long range, persistent, even armed UAVs embarked on every surface combatant is slowly edging closer to reality with research programs such as DARPA’s TERN. Realizing the full potential of distributed warfare at sea will require will a variety of vessels to augment the conventional fleet, which is unlikely to grow much at all.
Non-traditional naval platforms
Expeditionary Swarming
Swarming gets even more chaotic where the sea meets the land and increasingly dense urban populations reside. David
Kilcullen has laid out a future of swarming maneuver doctrine already embraced by many urban guerrillas.
Ever since J.F.C. Fuller, in 1918, the foundational concept of maneuver doctrine for the 20th century is not to fight the enemy bit by bit, but to find his headquarters and put a pistol shot into the brain. Fuller talks about finding and killing the enemy headquarters, putting a deep penetration armored unit behind the frontline looking for the enemy headquarters to kill it. That is on what blitzkrieg is based on, it’s what Russian maneuver warfare is based on, it is a fundamental guiding idea for Liddell Hart or Guderian. The scary thing that Black Hawk down tells you is that because of how these guys operate-- with tactics completely emergent within a self synchronizing swarm-- there is actually no headquarters in the Western sense. The guy I sat with, a Somali brigade commander, didn’t have a bunch of guys with radios in a command and control center. What he had, it was walkie talkie and a larger truck than everybody else, carrying a reserve of fighters and ammo. He just listened on the radio and drove around the battlefield to where the fighting was heaviest. He didn’t need to give an order for the attack because the self-synchronizing tactical system didn’t require that. The scary thing that Black Hawk Down tells you is that if the Rangers were able to capture Aidid, it might not have any effect at all. They were going after a headquarters that didn’t exist.
American special
operations forces are already doing distributed warfare. Several SOC-Forward headquarters are deployed across the globe, each one composed of very small teams of multidisciplinary
operators and enablers conducting training, information operations, civil affairs, and
direct action. The Marine Corps is also
experimenting with distributing smaller units of action, both ashore and afloat.
Unconventional players
Unconventional players
![]() |
A small sample of the largest surrogate fleet in the world... |
Naval
swarms will not consist solely of naval combatants. What I call naval
unconventional warfare - essentially the use of maritime surrogates to
achieve naval objectives - will feature prominently in future swarm
warfare at sea. China’s massive fishing
fleets are already demonstrating a form of surrogate swarming in the South
China Sea.
These
non-state maritime actors - some working at the behest of nation states and
others on their own accord - will complicate rules of engagement, entice overreaction, disrupt
surface movement, and in some some cases, attack as swarms.
On
the air side, commercial drones, of which 32,000 are estimated to be flying in
the next decade (most not in the U.S.), along with of hundreds thousands of
personal drones, will be pulled into this unconventional swarming threat.
Currently light-weight and short-ranged, civilian UAVs will expand in capability more
rapidly than their military counter-parts.
Physics Gets a Vote
A solid argument against this vision is that smaller platforms, be they a combatant ship, unmanned underwater vehicle, or unmanned air vehicle, are limited in range and payload capacity. Notionally, shorter-legged vehicles dispersed over hundreds or thousands of miles require more frequent resupply and refueling (or recharging). However, innovative ways of resupply will mitigate some of these concerns. Along these lines, the Navy’s recent choice of the V-22 as a carrier onboard delivery (COD) aircraft will greatly enhance the fleet’s distributed logistics capabilities. The COD will move parts and people not only for the single deployed carrier and its air-wing, but for amphibious ships and smaller combatants (via vertrep) within hundreds of miles of the carrier. Commonality with Marine Corps and Air Force Special Operations Command Ospreys will bring operational, maintenance, and training efficiencies. Unmanned vehicles operating at the edge of the battlespace will require new concepts in afloat logistics. Moored undersea docking stations to recharge the batteries of long range UUVs should be designed for air or surface deployment. Unmanned air vehicles flying from surface ships will also support vertical resupply of distributed sea and ground elements operating hundreds of miles from their motherships. This concept has been demonstrated successfully ashore with the K-MAX rotary wing vehicle which flew more than 17,000 sorties in Afghanistan, delivering over four million pounds of supplies to Marines in remote forward operating bases. Even small patrol vessels operating alone and unafraid could be partially refueled by air, using blivets (from drones, of course) or conceivably, a reverse helicopter in-flight refueling (HIFR) system from the V-22. Moreover, surface ships with shallower drafts, such as the FF and JHSV can pull into more austere and remote ports for upkeep than their deep draft counter-parts.
The Future is Clear as Mud
It’s
possible that this future is unrealistic, and large combatants - including the
nuclear-powered aircraft carrier - will reign the seas for decades, if not centuries
to come. But given the changing rate of
technology, an entirely different scenario is not implausible. In Peter Diamandis' new book BOLD, futurist Ray Kurzweil portrays a future dominated by nanosystems,
artificial intelligence, and yes, singularity. Diamandis discusses some of these astounding (and somewhat scary) predictions for the not too far out future:
By the 2020s, most diseases will go away as nanobots become smarter than current medical technology. Normal human eating can be replaced by nanosystems. The Turing test begins to be passable. Self-driving cars begin to take over the roads, and people won’t be allowed to drive on highways.
By the 2030s, virtual reality will begin to feel 100% real. We will be able to upload our mind/consciousness by the end of the decade.
By the 2040s, non-biological intelligence will be a billion times more capable than biological intelligence (a.k.a. us). Nanotech foglets will be able to make food out of thin air and create any object in physical world at a whim.
By 2045, we will multiply our intelligence a billionfold by linking wirelessly from our neocortex to a synthetic neocortex in the cloud.
Extrapolating just a few of these trends
into naval warfare, one begins to see a very different future emerge than one
dominated by a handful of $15 billion capital ships. Thousands of autonomously navigating civilian and military unmanned surface
vessels, such as the “Sea Hunter” prototype currently undergoing testing, will
share the seas with manned vessels.
These vessels will be large, small, and very small, and much cheaper to operate than
their manned equivalents.
If Kurzweil is even partially accurate, nanobots will eventually become naval weapons in their own right. Dispersed from the air prior to hostilities, they will float dormant like plankton in shipping lanes until they recognize an enemy ship. They will then swarm the vessel’s seawater intakes, disable engines, sensors, and perhaps even crew. Airborne nano-bots floating in the trade winds will be attracted to electromagnetic emissions and disable radar array faces.
If Kurzweil is even partially accurate, nanobots will eventually become naval weapons in their own right. Dispersed from the air prior to hostilities, they will float dormant like plankton in shipping lanes until they recognize an enemy ship. They will then swarm the vessel’s seawater intakes, disable engines, sensors, and perhaps even crew. Airborne nano-bots floating in the trade winds will be attracted to electromagnetic emissions and disable radar array faces.
Far-fetched? Perhaps, but then again, twenty
five years ago, how many of us expected to always carry a pocket-sized device that
responds to voice commands enabling us access to most of the world’s
information wirelessly? Kurzweil did.
Because the only certainty is that disruptive technological change will continue to accelerate apace, investments in extremely expensive singular-unit force structure (both air and naval) must be viewed with circumspect. Simply put - if we don't figure out naval swarming, the democratization of technology today means somebody else will. America's traditional battle force fleet can - and should - be expanded as the fiscal and political environment dictates. But careful investments in an alternative portfolio emphasizing distributed naval operations and swarming will hedge future uncertainty that is sure to result from coming technological disruption.
The opinions and views expressed in this post are those of the author alone and are presented in his personal capacity. They do not necessarily represent the views of the U.S. Department of Defense or any of its agencies.
Thinking about Offensive Naval Mining
Note from Jon Solomon: The article below was written by a Systems Planning and Analysis colleague of mine, Jonathan Altman. Following my post last month regarding how sea denial might figure into U.S. maritime strategy for deterring—or if necessary, defending against—Chinese aggression in East Asia, Jonathan pointed out to me several issues and scenarios regarding the potential use of offensive mining in such a strategy that I hadn't considered. Jonathan has graciously agreed to share his observations with you here in order to broaden the ongoing debate.
Recently the concept of
naval mining, specifically the potential advantages in using naval mines to
achieve targeted sea denial, has received more publicity in naval themed publications
and the blogosphere. Mining advocates’ hopes were emboldened just before
Christmas when the “Cromnibus” was signed into law, containing a line of $10M for
naval mining research and development. However, careful consideration should be
given to just what employing mines might entail. Though not apparent from most
public analyses, there are significant potential issues with employing naval
mines offensively that need to be understood. The first of these is their
connotation and associated baggage.
When the average (but
informed) American hears the term “mine,” it generally conjures up images of a
soldier in Vietnam or WWII missing a limb, or crying in the aftermath of a mine
explosion that killed a dear friend. More historically aware Americans might think
of WWI era sailors and/or civilians drowning in the frigid North Atlantic, or
perhaps our own Sailors during the Korean War (the mine damage incurred by the
USS Samuel B. Roberts in 1988 and the USS Princeton and USS Tripoli in 1991 did
not result in ship loss). While maritime mining is quite different from land
mining, we must not overlook the baggage that mining as a term brings to the
table in the broader public sphere. Whole classes of weapons, many of which
were quite effective, have been banned by the international community at
various points in time (such as cluster munitions; despite continued US use of
these weapons). Land mines are similarly the focus of international ire. This
is not to argue that the United States should allow other countries to dictate
what types of weapons it can employ, only that using weapons such as these should
present a higher barrier to use because of the inherent perception loss that a
state receives for using them. Fundamentally, a weapon that achieves the same
effect without or with reduced baggage should be preferred.
Most recent advocacy
with respect to naval mining is written in context of use (either in terms of
notional wartime employment or latent peacetime deterrent value) against China,
so that’s where the remainder of this piece is focused. Note however that many
of the tenets enumerated in a China context could be applied to contingencies
involving other illiberal non-Western states.
The foundational issue
with employing naval mines offensively against the People’s Liberation Army
Navy (PLAN) is simply that it may not have the intended effect of keeping the
PLAN bottled up inside its ports. For offensive naval mining to be effective,
the Chinese would need to be deterred from sortieing their fleet out to sea.
However, this would require a Chinese cultural aversion to losses that may not
exist. Chinese military culture has
historically accepted exceptionally high losses as a price for victory (e.g.
Chinese Civil War and WWII), and individual sacrifice for the greater good is
respected[1]. Especially
when one factors in the ample amount of old
ships the PLAN has, there’s reason to suspect that when
confronted with a minefield (or a small number of emplaced mines), the PLAN might
manually force a Q route using low value, outdated but manned ships (this logic
could similarly be applied to Iran or North Korea). This could render the
minefield ineffective, and void the operational end that it was deployed to
achieve. It should be noted however that this approach runs some risk of
failure as narrow channels could be clogged by sunken hulls in an attempt to
force a Q route; accordingly this tactic is not likely to be employed where
maneuver space and/or water depth is restricted.
Even if offensive naval
mining was effective in that it kept PLAN assets contained in port for fear of
losses, larger concerns should exist in the mind of offensive mining supporters
about what a devious foe could do to exploit this situation given mines’
reputation as indiscriminate killers. Too often in analysis of “the other,”
whether in intelligence, military or even economic venues, we as Westerners
with our own ingrained biases export these onto those who do not share them; a
process called mirror imaging. Assuming that a foe would simply not take losses
to force a Q route is one example of this; another is imagining that they would
avoid acting in ways that are morally repugnant to Western norms to exploit a
favorable opportunity.
Recent action in the
South China Sea has shown the Chinese to be not only excellent strategists (incrementally extending their legitimacy in
a whole region without firing a shot), but also masters of information warfare
(the Russians are not too shabby at it themselves). Applying this acumen to offensive
naval mining, as soon as a minefield was discovered (or more likely announced
to meet the rules of war); there would be tremendous advantage for the Chinese
government to create the conditions where a US mine (real or perceived) kills
a large number of Chinese (or third-party country) civilians. Here is where the
tactical views of mining could become irrelevant in the face of a well-designed
strategy. For example, even if a US mine is so “smart” that there is no way it
could ever kill a civilian ship (no small feat), there would be nothing to stop
the Chinese from packing a vessel with explosives and blowing it up themselves
in the rough geographic region of the offensive minefield; preferably in full
view of cameras and with plenty of innocents on board. This situation could be
made even more challenging for the US if a legitimate mine had already sunk a
military ship in a similar location, as deniability would become nearly
impossible at that point.
The Chinese could
conceivably also create the appearance that the U.S. had mined offensively when
or where it had not. They could use the confusion that surrounded the “mine
strike” for propaganda purposes as well as to justify ‘retaliation’ that was
actually premeditated escalation. By selling the perception that they had
responded rather than preempted, they would reduce the risk of being seen as an
aggressor and would create a more favorable image to the world at large (a key
component of information warfare).
There would probably be
no way, and certainly no quick way, for the United States to prove to the watching
global public that a Chinese non-military vessel’s loss in the above scenarios
stemmed from a Chinese false flag operation as opposed to a genuine US
mine. The perception that the Chinese
were the victim of an irresponsible US weapon could also be used as diplomatic
leverage to strain US regional alliances and push neutral powers towards China.
European countries could be especially sensitive to pressure from their publics
to back out of openly supporting the US in this case.
Depending on when in a
conflict the aforementioned incident is staged, a savvy adversary may be able
to extract additional advantages. For instance, if conducted at a period of
heightened tension, China could use the incident as a casus belli and follow it with an overt (preemptive) attack. This would
be increasingly likely if the Chinese were already preparing for a major
offensive; similar to the German false-flagged Gleiwitz
incident in 1939. Any strain on the Chinese economy (the
basis of Chinese Communist Party legitimacy) would make this option even more
attractive.
Ultimately, it must be
asked “what is the intended goal of offensively employing naval mines”?
According to recent writing,
it seems to be large scale but targeted sea denial enabled through a capability
to strike targets in a discriminate fashion at a time and place of US choosing.
Certainly this is a valid and desirable military end. The only question then is
whether offensive mines are the best tool to accomplish this objective given
their stigma and assumed ability to engage targets without human intervention. Some
existing technologies that might be evaluated as alternatives to mines in this
respect could include torpedoes, long-range anti-ship cruise missiles, or
surface ship delivered anti-ship ballistic missiles. Future unmanned systems
may also provide an option for selective targeting with a man-in-the-loop that
would greatly reduce the baggage that comes with both the word “mine” and with
the idea of a self-targeting weapon. In the end, a weapon that delivers
targeted but wide area sea denial without the downsides associated with a naval
mine is likely to be a valuable and increasingly necessary military tool to
maintain United States maritime influence in many parts of the world.
Jonathan Altman is an analyst with Systems
Planning and Analysis Inc, a defense contractor located in Alexandria,
Virginia. He holds a Master’s Degree in International Security from the Josef
Korbel School of International Studies at the University of Denver.
The
views expressed herein are those only of the author and do not reflect the
official policy or position of Systems Planning and Analysis, the Department of
Defense or the U.S. Government.
[1] Oyserman,
Coon, & Kemmelmeier, Rethinking Individualism and Collectivism: Evaluation
of Theoretical Assumptions and Meta-Analyses. In this analysis of 250 cultures,
the Chinese were found to be the most collectivist of all groups studied.
Collectivist
groups typically subordinate individual actions for the good of the group.
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