Expert’s warning to US Navy on China: Bigger fleet almost always wins
Seoul, South Korea
CNN
—
As China continues to grow what is already the world’s largest
navy, a professor at the US Naval War College has a warning for American
military planners: In naval warfare, the bigger fleet almost always
wins.
Writing in the January issue of the US Naval Institute’s Proceedings magazine,
Sam Tangredi says if history is any lesson, China’s numerical advantage
is likely to lead to defeat for the US Navy in any war with China.
Tangredi, the Leidos Chair of Future Warfare Studies at the US
Naval War College and a former US Navy captain, looked at 28 naval wars,
from the Greco-Persian Wars of 500 BC, through recent Cold War proxy
conflicts and interventions. He found in only three instances did
superior technology defeat bigger numbers.
“All other wars were won by superior numbers or, when between
equal forces, superior strategy, or admiralship,” Tangredi wrote. “Often
all three qualities act together, because operating a large fleet
generally facilitates more extensive training and is often an indicator
that leaders are concerned with strategic requirements,” Tangredi wrote.
The three outliers – wars from the 11th, 16th and 19th centuries –
aren’t likely familiar to all but the most ardent of scholars, but
others that show where numbers beat technology certainly are.
Take the Napoleanic wars of the early 1800s, for example.
“French warships were superior in the technology of ship design
and construction, but ultimately, it was the large numbers of Royal Navy
ships that prevented Napoleon from crossing the (English) channel,”
Tangredi wrote.
Pentagon leaders have identified China
as the US military’s “pacing threat.” But fleet size numbers show that
the US military can’t keep pace with China’s naval growth.
The People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) surpassed the US Navy in
fleet size sometime around 2020 and now has around 340 warships,
according to the Pentagon’s 2022 China Military Power Report, released
in November. China’s fleet is expected to grow to 400 ships in the next
two years, the report says.
Meanwhile, the US fleet sits under 300 ships, and the Pentagon’s
goal is to have 350 manned ships, still well behind China, by 2045,
according to the US Navy’s Navigation Plan 2022 released last summer.
00:34 / 00:34
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So to compete, US military leaders are counting on technology.
That same Pentagon document says, “the world is entering a new age
of warfare, one in which the integration of technology, concepts,
partners, and systems — more than fleet size alone — will determine
victory in conflict.”
But Tangredi points to World War II in the Pacific, where Japanese
technology began as the better of America’s, as an example of why the
Pentagon’s conclusions don’t necessarily hold true.
“Imperial Japan entered the war with some superior technologies:
the Zero fighter, Long-Lance torpedo, and aerial torpedoes that could
strike in shallow water,” Tangredi wrote in Proceedings.
“However, it was the overall might of US industry and the size of
the US fleet (particularly its logistics and amphibious ships) that
ground out victory over the Imperial Japanese Navy,” he said.
Alessio Patalano, professor of war and strategy at King’s College in London, praised Tangredi’s work.
“His research is a very good way to push back on the silly
assumption that mass doesn’t matter in war at sea,” Patalano said.
He stressed two key points.
A larger size means more leaders looking to gain the edge in their commands.
“A larger fleet tend to be more competitive, in training personnel development, and operational capacity,” Patalano said.
And he said a large industrial base is essential, especially in
being able to build new units after incurring casualties in battle.
“In naval war, attrition is a real thing, so the ability to replace is vital,” Patalano said.
Tangredi’s look at the World War II aircraft carrier fleets shows
the stark numbers. Both the US and Japan began the war with eight
carriers, he said.
“During the war, Imperial Japan built 18 carrier-equivalents …
while the United States built 144. Unless the United States decided not
to fight, Japan never had a chance,” he wrote.
Shipbuilding was a US strength when it was the world’s industrial giant in the 1940s. That title now falls to China.
“Most analysts doubt that the US defense industry — which has
consolidated and shrunk since the end of the Cold War — could expand
quickly enough to meet wartime demand,” Tangredi wrote.
02:22 / 03:55
Analysts warn of intensifying arms race across Asia (November, 2021)
Indeed, there is worry US industry cannot keep up with the demand of providing weapons assistance to Ukraine to fight Russia’s invasion while keeping US weapons arms inventories at adequate levels.
Adm. Daryl Caudle, commander of US Fleet Forces Command, last week
called on the nation’s defense industries to step up their game, saying
“you’re not delivering the ordnance we need.”
“It’s so essential to winning. And I can’t do that without the
ordnance,” Caudle said at a symposium in Washington, adding that the US
is “going against a competitor here, and a potential adversary, that is
like nothing we’ve ever seen.”
In an online forum last week, Caudle’s boss, Chief of Naval
Operations Adm. Mike Gilday, also noted the numbers problem the US faces
in a potential Pacific conflict.
“The United States Navy is not going to be able to match the PLAN missile for missile,” Gilday said.
And if the US Navy can’t match China’s missile for missile, or ship for ship, Tangredi wonders where it can find an edge.
“US leaders must ask themselves to what extent they are willing to
bet on technological — without numerical — superiority in that fight,”
he wrote.
“I do not say that a smaller, technologically superior fleet could never defeat a much larger fleet, I only say that — with the possible the exception of three cases in the past 1,200 years — none has.”