Marinha da República Popular da China (PLAN)

Assuntos em discussão: Marinha do Brasil e marinhas estrangeiras, forças de superfície e submarinas, aviação naval e tecnologia naval.

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Suetham
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Re: Marinha da República Popular da China (PLAN)

#1951 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Abr 07, 2024 10:50 am


https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Comme ... a-of-Japan
Is #China seeking a submarine presence in the Sea of #Japan?

Body of water could offer Chinese ballistic missile subs a place to hide.

Unlikely, the #SouthChinaSea is a much better place to hide strategic subs.

A new security risk may face Japan: China maintaining a constant military presence in the Sea of Japan, a possible launching point for nuclear weapons aimed at the U.S.

Last December, two Chinese H-6 bombers entered the airspace above the Sea of Japan to rendezvous with a pair of Russian Tu-95 bombers.

Accompanied by fighter jets, patrol planes and other aircraft from both countries, they flew from the Sea of Japan to the East China Sea.

China has been conducting similar air exercises with the Russian military every year since 2019, as well as naval maneuvering exercises. These add up to a growing Chinese presence in the Sea of Japan.

"It appears the Chinese military wants to eventually deploy Tang-class [Type 096] nuclear ballistic missile submarines equipped with the next-generation JL-3 submarine-launched ballistic missile to the Sea of Japan," said a former Japanese Defense Ministry intelligence officer.

Such speculation is not new, but it has fast gained currency, triggered by the formation of AUKUS, the trilateral security partnership among Australia, the U.K. and the U.S.

AUKUS's biggest aim is to contain China's submarines in the South China Sea with attack submarines, along with large numbers of uncrewed underwater vehicles armed with sensors and weapons.

The South China Sea is relatively shallow. Moreover, a long distance separates Hainan -- the Chinese island that serves as the base for China's South China Sea subs -- from where Jin-class Type 094 ballistic missile submarines mainly operate.

The Chinese military has created clusters of artificial islands around reefs in the South China Sea. The islands are part of China's efforts to ensure the survival of its Jin-class nuclear subs armed with the JL-2 missile, its most powerful SLBM threat to the U.S.

But AUKUS has adopted a "transparent sea" initiative that seeks to improve undersea surveillance capabilities using advanced technology. These advances could make the South China Sea less safe for Chinese subs.

To escape this fate, China needs to move ballistic missile submarines to more secure waters, with the Sea of Japan a leading candidate. An SLBM launched from the Sea of Japan would have a shorter distance to travel to the U.S. over the Arctic Circle, giving Washington less time to respond.

"If a crisis occurs on the Korean peninsula in the distant future, the Chinese military could take advantage of the turmoil by occupying the northern part of North Korea and create a corridor extending from northeast China to the Sea of Japan," said the former Defense Ministry intelligence officer.

"If the Chinese military were to secure Rason port, which the Japanese military also used during the [Pacific] war, then the Chinese could use the location as the home port for SLBM units, and the waters nearby Rason are deep enough to conceal SLBMs," this person added.

The repeated flights of bombers above the Sea of Japan could be considered attempts to establish air readiness to protect SLBMs.

North Korea has maintained a policy of not allowing Chinese warships to dock at Rason, or at any port along the eastern seaboard, perhaps out of wariness toward China's intentions.

But it is not unimaginable that North Korea may someday give China access to land near the northern border, in return for China's and Russia's backing during an invasion of South Korea.

If that were to happen while the U.S. is distracted by conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Mideast, there is a non-zero chance that Pyongyang could take control of all of South Korea, or the northern part of it.

This scenario is consistent with North Korea's heightened hostilities against South Korea in recent months.

Under President Xi Jinping, China has made no secret of its goal of unifying with Taiwan. For those ambitions to become a reality, China would need to prevent intervention by the U.S., according to the former intelligence officer.

For China to be in a position to thwart the U.S., it would require "conditions in which Chinese SLBM can be preserved for striking the U.S. mainland as a last resort, even after an escalation of a U.S.-China war," this person said.

The Chinese military would need to deploy ballistic missile submarines to the Sea of Japan to attain that readiness, which would open up the possibility that Chinese forces would expand into the Sea of Japan prior to a crisis breaking out in Taiwan.

If the Chinese forces including the SLBM units were to take the unprecedented step of maintaining a regular presence in the Sea of Japan, Tokyo would be forced to reassess its own security readiness.

Since the Cold War, the Japan Self-Defense Forces have been prepared to cooperate with the U.S. military to respond to Soviet or later Russian ballistic missile submarines stationed in the Sea of Okhotsk. In future, if Chinese ballistic missile submarines are essentially driven out of the South China Sea by AUKUS, Japanese forces would need to confront them in the Sea of Japan.

Not only would Japanese forces need to improve anti-sub capabilities, they would also have to deepen their collaboration with the three AUKUS militaries.

Last June, China regained the right to use Russia's far eastern port of Vladivostok for the first time in 165 years. China is known for having maritime militias board civilian vessels.

There is a real possibility that China will step up its military intelligence-gathering operations with Chinese commercial ships passing through the Sea of Japan.

Meanwhile, Japanese and Australian defense ministries officially agreed last month to launch a joint research project geared toward the interoperability of undersea drones deployed by both nations.
https://www.wsj.com/world/africa/u-s-ch ... a-616e9e77
U.S.-China Tensions Have a New Front: A Naval Base in Africa
American officials urge leaders in Gabon and Equatorial Guinea to reject Beijing’s overtures for a military presence on their Atlantic coastline

Imagens mais nítidas de uma maquete do caça Jian-35 no convés do porta-aviões Liaoning da Marinha do PLA



https://www.navalnews.com/event-news/wd ... -wds-2024/
China Unveils Next-Gen Attack USV ‘Thunderer A2000’ At WDS 2024


Atividades de navios de pesquisa chineses no Oceano Índico

https://www.repositorio.mar.mil.br/handle/ripcmb/846234
https://www.repositorio.mar.mil.br/bits ... VELOZO.pdf
A INFLUÊNCIA DA TEORIA DO ALMIRANTE CASTEX NA ESTRATÉGIA NAVAL CHINESA NO SÉCULO XXI

Esse é um gênio estrategista naval francês do século XX que é desconhecido fora da França


Chinese Naval Modernization In 2023 Reviewed - News Military Update _ NMU

https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/ ... use-209485
Aircraft Carriers, Submarines and More: China's Navy Is a Real Powerhouse

https://www.newsweek.com/china-submarin ... eo-1854487
Video Catches Rare Glimpse of China's Silent Killer Submarine



https://www.navalnews.com/naval-news/20 ... ar-so-far/
Chinese Carrier Aviation In 2024 – The Year So Far
New imagery reveals important development steps for Chinese carrier aviation. While the new KJ-600 was spotted on aircraft carrier Fujian, the next gen J-35 and catapult variant of J-15 also made new appearances.
Uma aeronave KJ-600 AWACS foi avistada no convés do terceiro porta-aviões chinês Fujian. Ele formará a espinha dorsal do grupo aéreo do porta-aviões e realizará missões para atingir aeronaves baseadas em porta-aviões, incluindo caças J-15/15D e J-35, em futuros confrontos com forças inimigas americanas na região do Pacífico.

Sobre a situação dos navios de reconhecimento Type 927 da Marinha do PLA, projetados para coletar dados sobre submarinos estrangeiros e suas rotas de movimento.

Bem, agora os marinheiros chineses adicionaram o seu próprio equipamento de guerra electrónica. Até recentemente, a Força Aérea do ELP podia orgulhar-se de ter um novo avião de guerra electrónica, o J-16D, mas agora Pequim mostrou que a aviação baseada em porta-aviões adquiriu o seu próprio caça “Rabman”, o J-15D (foto).

Imagens regulares de testes de voo do caça J-35 baseadas em porta-aviões da Marinha do PLA




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Re: Marinha da República Popular da China (PLAN)

#1952 Mensagem por FCarvalho » Dom Abr 07, 2024 2:55 pm

Todos se rearmando, ou revisando seus planos de equipamento para os anos futuros a curto e médio prazo.
Os europeus começaram tarde, e só por causa da guerra da Ucrânia e o medo da expansão do conflito com os russos, além da ameaça velada dos norte americanos se retirarem da OTAN.
Os norte americanos, por sua vez, apesar de serem os maiores investidores mundiais em defesa, estão questionando hoje o status de preparo e condição de resposta não apenas da US Navy\USMC, mas de todas as suas ffaa's para os anos futuros, também a curto prazo.
O sul e sudeste asiático estão em ebulição com praticamente todas as nações limitrofres com o mar da China se movendo no sentido de reequipar-se e buscar além de buscar a cobertura estadunidense.
O Japão finalmente parece estar largando mão das muitas auto limitações impostas pelos USA no fim da GM II em sua constituição relativas à defesa, e está embarcando em um largo e expressivo programa de rearmamento, com vistas a ampliar e potencializar suas já bem fortes capacidades defensivas, inclusive com a conversão de navios em Nae, até outro dia algo inimaginável no país.
O oriente médio segue sendo o barril de pólvora de sempre, com os reinos dos petrodólares gastando mundos e fundos em sistemas de defesa, e investindo em tecnologia e produção e desenvolvimento de novos sistemas. O norte da África segue o mesmo rumo, com as regiões subsaarianas também em constante instabilidade institucional e disputadas a tapa por russos, europeus e árabes sob todos os termos. A região central e sul africana também estão lançando luzes sobre suas respectivas capacidades de defesa, com Angola, Nigéria e África do Sul na liderança dos investimentos.
No continente latino americano, os problemas seguem sendo a influência do narcotráfico, e suas ramificações político-ideológicas e terroristas, além do crime organizado que se espalha como fogo no milharal. Isto tem levado há décadas de desleixo e falta de importância dos sistemas de defesa nos países da região, muito mais ocupados em combater o afamado "inimigo interno", passando ao largo das grandes questões mundiais sobre defesa. O Brasil, como sempre, segue refém da obtusa e inquestionável alienação e irresponsabilidade político-ideológica, institucional e social com a Defesa do país, com suas ffaa's literalmente servindo hoje de "babá de pobre" e quebra galho para todo tipo de ação governamental - em todos os níveis - que não encontram respaldo na infraestrutura civil da administração pública. Defesa tornou-se na prática, uma missão secundária há muito tempo das forças militares brasileiras, com a omissão e complacência de seguidos comandantes há pelo menos 4 décadas.
Nada muito diferente de 160 anos atrás. Mas, quem liga. Somos um país pacífico, não é mesmo... :roll:




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