The mighty American nuclear-powered attack submarine:
they were, at least until very recently, supposed to be the secret sauce, the
big stick that America and its allies would use against China or Russia if
things got ugly—and for good reason. With both nations along with Iran and others developing anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) capabilities
that make it tough for traditional power projection tools like aircraft
carriers to patrol critical waterways in a crisis, stealthy American submarines
seemed the best way to ensure tactical and strategic advantage—waging war below
the waves of deadly A2/AD battle-networks. U.S. attack subs were even at one
point the main ingredient for America’s main effort to turn A2/AD on its head, the always controversial and misunderstood Air-Sea Battle
Concept.
But as all things, advantages that once seemed long-lasting can erode
and decay over time. With advances in new ways to detect submarines
that move far beyond simple acoustics and with China beginning to place critical sonar nets in places
where U.S. submarines would surely sail in times of trouble, many
have begun to worry that America’s technological sophisticated subs could become the “battleship” of the twenty-first
century.
So what is America’s best and brightest to do? There has been discussion
in professional circles of having American subs fight from range—i.e. turning
them into something akin to underwater aircraft carriers launching undersea
style drones, or what is many times referred to as UUVs, to take the fight to
the enemy from a distance. And if impressive early research that is making the
headlines today bares fruit, submarine-style underwater carriers could become a
reality—with some important bonuses.
According to a press release from the Johns
Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, researchers
have crafted “an innovative unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) that can stay on
station beneath the water, then launch into the air to perform a variety of
missions.”
While such research seems to be in a very early state, such news is a
promising development, for sure. If—and this is a big if—such a UAV
could be scaled into something larger and adapted with an offensive role in
mind, like being able to deploy out of a submarine torpedo tube or vertical
launch tube, carry sensors and some sort of weapons load, the U.S. Navy would
have a platform that can perform surveillance and go on the attack from
distance. Such a platform could go a long way in negating the challenges U.S.
submarines could face in the years to come. In fact, U.S. subs could really
become underwater flattops that could conduct surveillance and attack from the
air and in the water—two-domain flattops, if you will.
It gets better. The systems in the works has some interesting feature
sets worth mentioning and are different than my own vision and what most
experts think of when it comes to merging subs and UUVs—indeed, something far
better.
The system John Hopkins is building, the Corrosion Resistant Aerial
Covert Unmanned Nautical System—or CRACUNS—is described as “a submersible UAV
that can be launched from a fixed position underwater, or from an unmanned
underwater vehicle (UUV) [my emphasis]. A team from APL’s Force Projection
Sector worked with fabrication experts in the Research and Exploratory
Development Department to create a new type of unmanned vehicle that can
operate effectively in two very different arenas: air and water.”
Make special note of the mention that this UAV could be launched from a
UUV. Imagine this possible scenario, if the research pans out: a future U.S.
attack submarines launching a drone-like UUV that goes out hundreds of miles on
a surveillance or strike mission that can launch its own UAV—into the water or
up into the sky. Yes and read that right, underwater drones having their own
drones. Wow.
The release also raised the possibility that such a platform could be
developed in large numbers, creating some amazing advantages, stating:
“CRACUNS’ low cost makes it expendable, allowing for the use of large numbers
of vehicles for high-risk scenarios.” Maybe UAV swarms? Yes, it’s OK to get
excited now.
“Engineers at APL have long worked on both Navy submarine systems and
autonomous UAVs,” explained Jason Stipes, a project manager for CRACUNS. “In
response to evolving sponsor challenges, we were inspired to develop a vehicle
that could operate both underwater and in the air.”
And it seems this new system could have some amazing potential.
According to the release CRACUNS “enables new capabilities not possible with
existing UAV or UUV platforms. Its ability to operate in the harsh littoral
(shore) environment, as well as its payload flexibility, enables a wide array
of potential missions” and that it can also “remain at and launch from a
significant depth without needing structural metal parts or machined surfaces.”
CRACUNS also has an interesting feature that would be of extreme
importance in an underwater drone: the ability to operate in the harshness of
saltwater. To make that happen, researches explained that they had to seal “the
most sensitive components in a dry pressure vessel. For the motors that are
exposed to salt water, APL applied commercially available protective coatings.
The team tested the performance of the motors by submerging them in salt water.
Two months later, they showed no sign of corrosion and continued to operate
while submerged.”
“CRACUNS successfully demonstrated a new way of thinking about the
fabrication and use of unmanned systems,” noted APL’s Rich Hooks, an engineer
who was responsible for the additive manufacturing techniques developed for
CRACUNS.
All this sounds great. However, back to that big “if” again—can this all
be adapted into a truly usable surveillance, and ideally, strike platform?
Could this be scaled up and used as a primary UUV weapons platform or will this
stay as an extension of a UUV, only being launched from larger UUVs? How much
range can this have—above and below the water? What would be the sensor and
weapons loadout?
Harry Kazianis (@grecianformula)
is a non-resident Senior Fellow for Defense Policy at the Center for the National Interest, a
non-resident Senior Fellow at the China Policy Institute as well as a
fellow for National Security affairs at the
Potomac Foundation. He is the former Executive Editor of the National
Interest and former Editor-In-Chief of the Diplomat.
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