Re: NOTICIAS
Enviado: Sex Jun 28, 2019 2:01 pm
Gostaria de ver um torpedo pesado acertando um casco desses, deve tirar o navio da água...
Marcelo Ponciano escreveu: ↑Sex Jun 28, 2019 11:36 am
Se não usar a FAB vai querer cortar as asinhas curtas da MB!!! Melhor usar o que tem do que ficar enferrujando em algum lugar. Mas concordo que é de doer.
Na guerra moderna nenhum caça chega tão perto de um navio inimigo bem armado.
A MB precisa se especializar na defesa aérea da costa para manter a asa fixa.
Qual notícia de drones na MB? Não achei e é uma coisa que sempre quis me informar sobre o que estariam fazendo a respeito.Bourne escreveu: ↑Dom Jun 30, 2019 9:42 amMarcelo Ponciano escreveu: ↑Sex Jun 28, 2019 11:36 am
Se não usar a FAB vai querer cortar as asinhas curtas da MB!!! Melhor usar o que tem do que ficar enferrujando em algum lugar. Mas concordo que é de doer.
Na guerra moderna nenhum caça chega tão perto de um navio inimigo bem armado.
A MB precisa se especializar na defesa aérea da costa para manter a asa fixa.
Obviamente que o navio ou grupo com defensa área mais densa vai tomar mísseis anti-navio e serem apoiados pela guerra eletrônica. Toda a defesa anti áerea pode ser penetrada de alguma forma. Isto é, a Marinha moderna precisa de asas fixas de alguma forma para complementar a força de superfície e submarinos. Atenção a noticia acima da criação do grupo de drones da MB. Os drones servem para muitas missões como reconhecimento, guerra eletrônica e ataque. Entre elas se aproximar muito de navios inimigos ou serem chamarizes.
No caso do drone iraniano, não sabemos se a US Navy permitiu ou se os iranianos penetraram na defesa. Caso o Irã tenha conseguir penetrar na defesa anti aérea pode levar mecanismos de guerra eletrônica e abrir a janela para ataque com mísseis e caças. Os russos, chineses e outros podem ter procedimentos bem similares que não conhecemos. Além de considerar que nesses asa fixa e avião naval especializada em ataques contra frotas e submarinos é essencial para as operações navais e defesa contra inimigos.
The U.S. Navy Should Watch Out: China's Submarine Force Is On the Rise
"Not only would China likely be able to deploy more submarines to the western Pacific than the United States, but the Chinese boats also might be better-suited than the American vessels are to operations in the region's shallow, crowded littoral zones."
The Chinese navy is close to building up one of the world’s most powerful submarine fleet, according to the 2019 edition of the U.S. Defense Department’s annual report on Chinese military developments.
The U.S. Navy is struggling to stay ahead.
The People’s Liberation Army Navy is “the region’s largest navy, with more than 300 surface combatants, submarines, amphibious ships, patrol craft and specialized types,” the report explains. “It is also an increasingly modern and flexible force.”
Beijing deploys its submarines in order to “achieve maritime superiority within the first island chain” that runs from Japan to The Philippines “as well as to deter and counter any potential third party intervention in a Taiwan conflict.”
To that end, China by mid-2019 has acquired six nuclear-powered attack submarine, or SSNs, and 50 conventional attack submarines, or SSs. “The speed of growth of the submarine force has slowed and will likely grow to between 65 and 70 submarines by 2020,” according to the report.
The Chinese undersea fleet includes 12 Russian-built Kilo-class SS units, eight capable of launching anti-ship cruise missiles, plus 13 Song-class/Type 039 SS units and 17 Yuan-class/Type 039A diesel-electric air-independent power attack submarines. The Pentagon expects three more Yuans to join the fleet by 2020.
Beijing’s SSN feet includes two Shang I-class/Type 093 SSNs and four Shang II-class/Type 093A SSNs. “By the mid-2020s, China will likely build the Type 093B guided-missile nuclear attack submarine,” the Pentagon report notes. “This new Shang-class variant will enhance the PLAN’s anti-surface warfare capability and could provide a more clandestine land-attack option.
The Chinese undersea build-up is part of a wider, regional submarine expansion. "Potential adversary submarine activity has tripled from 2008 levels, which requires at least a corresponding increase on the part of the United States to maintain superiority," U.S. Navy admiral Philip Davidson said in a March 2019 Congressional testimony.
"There are 400 foreign submarines in the world, of which roughly 75 percent reside in the Indo-Pacific region," Davidson testified. "One-hundred and sixty of these submarines belong to China, Russia and North Korea. While these three countries increase their capacity, the United States retires attack submarines faster than they are replaced."
In December 2016, the U.S. Navy announced it needed 66 attack submarines in order to meet regional commanders' needs. But in early 2019 the fleet had just 51 attack boats. And that number is set to fall.
Owing to a glut of sub production during the 1980s and a years-long gap in submarine production in the 1990s, the Navy possesses large numbers of old submarines, very few middle-age boats and lots of newer ones. A new Virginia-class SSN costs more than $2 billion to build.
Once a sub's nuclear reactor core wears out, usually after around 30 years of operation, the Navy must either decommission the boat or undertake an expensive refueling. Dozens of three-decade-old Los Angeles-class attack subs are likely to decommission in the next few years, shrinking the overall SSN fleet to just 42 boats in 2028.
"Numerically, SSNs remain the furthest from the inventory objective," the Navy stated in its shipbuilding plan for 2020.
Not only would China likely be able to deploy more submarines to the western Pacific than the United States, but the Chinese boats also might be better-suited than the American vessels are to operations in the region's shallow, crowded littoral zones.
The shallow Taiwan Strait, in particular, is inhospitable to big, deep-diving American subs. "While SSNs have enormous advantages over [diesel-powered] SSKs, shallow terrain partially limits the SSNs’ primary advantage: diving deep at high speeds after firing and thereby evade detection," Henry Holst explained in an essay for the U.S. Naval Institute.
In order partially to compensate for its growing disadvantage in submarines compared to the Chinese fleet, the U.S. Navy is experimenting with new, more efficient ways of supporting its subs, and also is buying robotic submarines that could reinforce manned boats on certain missions.
David Axe serves as Defense Editor of the National Interest. He is the author of the graphic novels War Fix, War Is Boring and Machete Squad.
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/ ... rise-56107