The S-400
system
Beijing and Moscow are growing ever closer, and the sale of Russian
anti-aircraft missiles will only make their neighbours more wary
Intensive military cooperation between China and Russia is set to
raise the eyebrows of their wary neighbours.
One
of the developments being closely watched is the negotiations between Beijing
and Moscow over the sale of the S-400 anti-aircraft missile system. While they
have dragged on since 2010, a senior Russian official said progress was made
recently.
"The
chances that China may be the first foreign buyer [of S-400s] are high,"
the official Voice of Russia cited the Kremlin's chief of staff, Sergei Ivanov,
as saying last month. But he didn't give any additional details.
If
the deal is approved, it will be their third big arms deal since last year.
The
S-400 Triumph, a new-generation system upgraded from the S-300, which the PLA
is using, is capable of countering all air attack weapons, including tactical
and strategic aircraft, ballistic missiles and hypersonic targets such as the
US' F-35 fighter jet.
Both
Beijing and Moscow need to get something from each other
Adviser
Wang Xudong
With
a range of 2,400km, the S-400 can engage up to 36 targets simultaneously with
as many as 72 missiles at altitudes of five metres to 30km.
Dr
Rajeswari Rajagopalan, a defence analyst at the New Delhi-based Observer
Research Foundation think tank, said as India also relied more on Russian arms
and military supplies, the S-400 deal between Moscow and Beijing would make
India increasingly concerned.
"The
Russian insensitivity in selling advanced weapons and platforms to China at the
cost of India is a reflection of the new emerging dynamics, and India has to
take measures to ensure its own maneuverability while maximising its
gains," she said.
"The
S-400 deal will not push India to come up with new military strategies, but
[will] change geopolitical development and the balance of power in Asia."
Wang
Xudong, an adviser on satellites to the central government, said China had
other new advanced weapons and missile systems, such as the DF-21D anti-ship
ballistic missile, known as a carrier killer, and the DF-41, which is capable
of hitting anywhere in the United States.
"China
wants to buy the S-400 missile system from Russia because both Beijing and
Moscow need to get something from each other," Wang said, adding that
Russia needed Chinese funding for research work.
"The
S-400 missile system will provide the PLA [with] an alternative weapon, if
necessary, and Beijing also doesn't need to spend so much time on producing
such a sophisticated armament as tension in the East and South China seas all
remind us to be well prepared."
Macau-based
military expert Antony Wong Dong said a deal between Russia and China would
encourage the US to build closer relationships with the Philippines, Vietnam
and even Taiwan.
"It's
not clear [how] the military cooperation between Beijing and Moscow will go,
but the US would definitely keep a close eye on it, and come up with new
strategies," he said.
Wong
said the West's decision to punish and isolate Russia in the aftermath of the
Ukraine crisis had drawn Moscow closer to Beijing.
"The
PLA is expecting to learn some particular missile technologies from the S-400
system. I think China will soon produce a new type of anti-aircraft missile
that compares with S-400 because Chinese are [good] copycats," Wong said.
China
and Russia are expected to cooperate further on developing the IL-476 transport
aircraft and IL-78 airborne refuelling tanker, according to state media in both
countries.
This
article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as Arms deal
will send message to world . Photo: AFP
What a lot of crap this writer on the SCMP came out with. First, the longest-range load-out for the S-400 is 400km, not 2,400km. Secondly, he talks about intercepting "hypersonic aircraft" like the F-35!! Hypersonic???? It's supersonic and does not have the range from a US carrier deployment, or from Japan, to penetrate PRC airspace (given that US carrier battle groups will need to stand off about 2,000km to be away from the DF-21D anti-fleet MRBM.
ReplyDeleteCheers
Greg
Gregory Copley, AM, GCHT*, FRCGS