Why China Fears (And Plans to Sink) America's Aircraft Carriers
More than twenty years ago, a military
confrontation in East Asia pushed the United States and China uncomfortably
close to conflict. Largely unknown in America, the event made a lasting
impression on China, especially Chinese military planners. The Third Taiwan
Crisis, as historians call it, was China’s introduction to the power and
flexibility of the aircraft carrier, something it obsesses about to this day.
The crisis began in 1995. Taiwan’s first-ever democratic elections for
president were set for 1996, a major event that Beijing naturally opposed. The
sitting president, Lee Teng-hui of the Kuomintang party, was invited to the
United States to speak at his alma mater, Cornell University. Lee was already
disliked by Beijing for his emphasis on “Taiwanization,” which favored home
rule and established a separate Taiwanese identity away from mainland China.
Now he was being asked to speak at Cornell on Taiwan’s democratization, and
Beijing was furious.
The Clinton administration was reluctant to grant Lee a visa—he had been
denied one for a similar talk at Cornell the year before—but near-unanimous
support from Congress forced the White House’s hand. Lee was granted a visa and
visited Cornell in June. The Xinhua state news agency warned, “The issue of Taiwan is as explosive as a barrel of
gunpowder. It is extremely dangerous to warm it up, no matter whether the
warming is done by the United States or by Lee Teng-hui. This wanton wound
inflicted upon China will help the Chinese people more clearly realize what
kind of a country the United States is.”
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In August 1995, China announced a series of missiles exercises in the
East China Sea. Although the exercises weren’t unusual, their announcement was,
and there was speculation that this was the beginning of an intimidation
campaign by China, both as retaliation against the Cornell visit and
intimidation of Taiwan’s electorate ahead of the next year’s elections. The
exercises involved the People’s Liberation Army’s Second Artillery Corps (now
the PLA Rocket Forces) and the redeployment of Chinese F-7 fighters (China’s
version of the MiG-21 Fishbed fighter) 250 miles from Taiwan. Also, in a move
that would sound very familiar in 2017, up to one hundred Chinese civilian
fishing boats entered territorial waters around the Taiwanese island of
Matsu, just off the coast of the mainland.
According to Globalsecurity.org, redeployments of Chinese
long-range missile forces continued into 1996, and the Chinese military
actually prepared for military action. China drew up contingency plans for
thirty days of missile strikes against Taiwan, one strike a day, shortly after
the March 1996 presidential elections. These strikes were not carried out, but
preparations were likely detected by U.S. intelligence.
In March 1996, China announced its fourth major military exercises since
the Cornell visit. The country’s military announced a series of missile test
zones off the Chinese coastline, which also put the missiles in the approximate
direction of Taiwan. In reality, China fired three missiles, two of which
splashed down just thirty miles from the Taiwanese capital of Taipei and one of
which splashed down thirty-five miles from Kaohsiung. Together, the two cities
handled most of the country’s commercial shipping traffic. For an export-driven
country like Taiwan, the missile launches seemed like an ominous shot across
the country’s economic bow.
American forces were already operating in the area. The USS Bunker
Hill, a Ticonderoga-class Aegis cruiser, was stationed off southern Taiwan
to monitor Chinese missile tests with its SPY-1 radar system. The Japan-based
USS Independence, along with the destroyers Hewitt and O’Brien
and frigate McClusky, took up position on the eastern side of the
island.
After the missile tests, the carrier USS Nimitz left the Persian
Gulf region and raced back to the western Pacific. This was an even more
powerful carrier battle group, consisting of the Aegis cruiser Port Royal,
guided missile destroyers Oldendorf and Callaghan (which would
later be transferred to the Taiwanese Navy), guided missile frigate USS Ford,
and nuclear attack submarine USS Portsmouth. Nimitz and its
escorts took up station in the Philippine Sea, ready to assist Independence.
Contrary to popular belief, neither
carrier actually entered the Taiwan Strait.
The People’s Liberation Army, unable to do anything about the American
aircraft carriers, was utterly humiliated. China, which was just beginning to
show the consequences of rapid economic expansion, still did not have a
military capable of posing a credible threat to American ships just a short
distance from of its coastline.
While we might never know the discussions that later took place, we know
what has happened since. Just two years later a Chinese businessman purchased
the hulk of the unfinished Russian aircraft carrier Riga, with the
stated intention of turning it into a resort and casino. We know this ship
today as China’s first aircraft carrier, Liaoning, after it was
transferred to the PLA Navy and underwent a fifteen-year refurbishment. At
least one other carrier is under construction, and the ultimate goal may be as
many as five Chinese carriers.
At the same time, the Second Artillery Corps leveraged its expertise in
long-range rockets to create the DF-21D antiship ballistic missile. The DF-21
has obvious applications against large capital ships, such as aircraft
carriers, and in a future crisis could force the U.S. Navy to operate eight to
nine hundred miles off Taiwan and the rest of the so-called “First Island
Chain.”
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The Third Taiwan Crisis was a brutal lesson for a China that had long
prepared to fight wars inside of its own borders. Still, the PLA Navy deserves
credit for learning from the incident and now, twenty-two years later, it is
quite possible that China could seriously damage or even sink an American
carrier. Also unlike the United States, China is in the unique position of both
seeing the value of carriers and building its own fleet while at the same time
devoting a lot of time and resources to the subject of sinking them. The United
States may soon find itself in the same position.
Kyle Mizokami is a defense and national-security writer based in San
Francisco who has appeared in the Diplomat, Foreign Policy, War is Boring and the Daily
Beast. In 2009, he cofounded the defense and security blog Japan
Security Watch.
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