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China is getting ready to field its 3rd aircraft carrier — here’s why they’re no match for US flattops

liaoning aircraft carrier
Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning during a drill in the western Pacific Ocean, April 18, 2018.

  • The centerpiece of China’s rapidly growing navy is its aircraft carriers, with two in service and another on the way.
  • The carriers represent a new capability for China’s military, and Beijing has touted them in state media, but Chinese flattops are still not on the same level as the US’s carriers in either technology or experience.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Of all the new weapons in China’s modern, ever-growing military arsenal, few have gotten as much attention as its aircraft carriers.

China has two carriers in service with a third on the way. The first, the Liaoning, was commissioned in 2012, while the second, the Shandong, was commissioned in December 2019.

Chinese state media has repeatedly displayed the ships in flashy videos showing off their capabilities, the most recent of which was released at the end of last August.

Despite the hype and praise lavished on them, China’s carriers are just not that big a threat compared to US carriers.

An outdated design

China aircraft carrier type 001a
China’s Shandong aircraft carrier.

Both the Liaoning and Shandong are based on the Soviet-designed Kuznetsov-class carrier of the 1980s.

The ship that became Liaoning, in fact, was being built as a Kuznetsov-class carrier for the Soviet navy until its construction was halted by the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.

China purchased the incomplete hull from Ukraine in 1998 and then did a nearly decade-long refit in an attempt to turn the ship into a true aircraft carrier, removing some older Soviet-designed systems like its missile arsenal. The Shandong was given upgrades as well.

But one relic of their Soviet origin still hampers their effectiveness: ski-jump ramps.

J-15 fighters from China's Liaoning aircraft carrier conduct a drill in an area of South China Sea
A J-15 fighter takes off of the Liaoning in the South China Sea.

The ski-jump is part of the Short Take-Off But Arrested Recovery (STOBAR) system, which launches an aircraft by forcing it upward as it speeds down the deck, allowing it to take off with less speed than normally required.

STOBAR carriers come with a significant trade off in that the aircraft have to be light in order to take off. This means Chinese jets can only carry a handful of missiles and have a limited fuel capacity.

In contrast, US carriers use steam-powered (and eventually electromagnetically powered) catapults to launch aircraft, allowing them to take off with heavier payloads. US carriers can launch fighters, fighter-bombers, surveillance and airborne-control aircraft, and even small transports, while Chinese carriers can only launch fighter jets with limited strike capability.

Chinese carriers must also launch their jets one at a time, while US carriers can launch two jets within seconds.

An inferior air wing

China aircraft carrier Shandong
China’s Shandong aircraft carrier at its commissioning ceremony at a port in Sanya in Hainan Province, December 17, 2019.

Added to this is the fact that China’s current naval fighter, the J-15 Flying Shark, is believed to be largely inferior to its American counterparts.

Like China’s carriers, the J-15 is based on a Soviet design. Unable to buy the Su-33 carrier-based fighter from Russia, the Chinese instead bought an unfinished Su-33 prototype from Ukraine and reverse-engineered it. The result is a carrier fighter plagued with problems.

While the prototype provided a good frame, it did not include the Su-33’s engines. China, known for having difficulty producing efficient jet engines, had to settle for underpowered domestic versions.

The underpowered engines and other mechanical issues resulted in numerous crashes, some fatal, that were such a problem that at one point the entire J-15 fleet was grounded for three months.

The J-15 is also the heaviest carrier-based fighter in service — an unwelcome distinction given the limits of the STOBAR system. The J-15’s empty weight, or without any fuel or weapons, of 38,000 pounds is nearly 6,000 pounds heavier than the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet and 4,000 pounds heavier than the F-35C.

A different mission

China aircraft carrier
The Shandong, China’s first domestically developed aircraft carrier, departs Dalian in Liaoning province, May 13, 2018.

Other differences compound the weaknesses of China’s carriers.

Their total air wings are smaller (40 and 44 on Liaoning and Shandong compared to 60 and 75 on the Nimitz and Gerald R. Ford-classes). Chinese carriers are believed to be slower and can only operate at sea for roughly six days before needing to refuel, whereas US nuclear-powered carriers can operate continuously for years as long as the crew is resupplied.

What’s more, the Chinese have less than a decade of experience with carrier operations, while the US has close to a century of hard-earned experience from multiple conflicts across numerous continents.

But it is important to remember that China has a different mission in mind for its carriers.

“It has little to do with fighting Taiwan or even fighting in the East China Sea,” Timothy Heath, a senior defense researcher at the Rand Corporation, told Insider. “In both of those situations, carriers are probably not going to last very long.”

China Liaoning aircraft carrier J-15
J-15 fighter jets on Liaoning during a drill in the East China Sea in April 2018..

Rather, China is hoping to use its carriers to help secure the important Indian Ocean trade routes that are the maritime part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

“That’s the real value of these, and it’s worth bearing that in mind when we start to question why they are willing to spend so much money on building carriers with limited air capacity,” Heath said. “For that mission, it may be enough.”

Most of East Asia’s oil imports flow through important choke points like the Strait of Malacca, and because China lacks allies in the region, it does not yet have military bases that can guarantee security to its interests there.

Moreover, the presence of rivals like India — which has its own carriers — increase China’s need for carriers to support its naval operations in the region.

“They are the mobile air bases to go with the ships to provide security as a way to compensate for the fact that they don’t have a string of military bases on land along that Indian Ocean route,” Heath said.

A steep learning curve

China Liaoning aircraft carrier J-15 fighter jet
A J-15 fighter jet lands the Liaoning during a drill in the East China Sea, April 24, 2018.

The Chinese mainland’s prime defense against enemy carriers is not China’s carriers but its anti-access/area-denial arsenal, which includes ballistic missiles, submarines, ground-based aircraft, and navy surface ships.

It is also worth noting that while China’s current carriers may be inadequate, a new generation of carriers is under construction.

The latest, the Type 003-class, which will have a flat deck rather than a ski jump, is believed to feature a steam-powered or electromagnetic catapult launch system and is expected to enter service in 2024, though state media claims it could be launched as soon as the end of this year.

China is also reportedly working hard to replace the J-15 with a stealth fighter.

With China’s ability to build ships extremely fast and its strong commitment to military modernization, the current carriers could turn out to be training vessels that help it gain carrier experience. Until then, China’s carriers have a lot to learn before they can rival US flattops.

“It’s a steep learning curve, and they are still on that curve,” Heath said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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