Courtesy: "Associated Press (AP)", 16 May 2011
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US Navy drones: Coming to a carrier near China?     
     YOKOSUKA, Japan      (AP) -- The U.S. is developing aircraft carrier-based drones that  could provide a crucial edge as it tries to counter China's military  rise.
American officials have been tightlipped  about where the unmanned armed planes might be used, but a top Navy  officer has told The Associated Press that some would likely be deployed  in Asia.
"They will play an integral role in  our future operations in this region," predicted Vice Adm. Scott Van  Buskirk, commander of the U.S. 7th Fleet, which covers most of the  Pacific and Indian oceans.
Land-based drones  are in wide use in the war in Afghanistan, but sea-based versions will  take several more years to develop. Northrop Grumman conducted a  first-ever test flight - still on land - earlier this year.
Van  Buskirk didn't mention China specifically, but military analysts agree  the drones could offset some of China's recent advances, notably its  work on a "carrier-killer" missile.
"Chinese  military modernization is the major long-term threat that the U.S. must  prepare for in the Asia-Pacific region, and robotic vehicles - aerial  and subsurface - are increasingly critical to countering that potential  threat," said Patrick Cronin, a senior analyst with the Washington-based  Center for New American Security.
China is  decades away from building a military as strong as America's, but it is  developing air, naval and missile capabilities that could challenge U.S.  supremacy in the Pacific - and with it, America's ability to protect  important shipping lanes and allies such as Japan and South Korea.
China  maintains it does not have offensive intentions and is only protecting  its own interests: The shipping lanes are also vital to China's  export-dependent economy. There are potential flash points, though,  notably Taiwan and clusters of tiny islands that both China and other  Asian nations claim as their territory.
The  U.S. Navy's pursuit of drones is a recognition of the need for new  weapons and strategies to deal not only with China but a changing  military landscape generally.
"Carrier-based  unmanned aircraft systems have tremendous potential, especially in  increasing the range and persistence of our intelligence, surveillance  and reconnaissance operations, as well as our ability to strike targets  quickly," Van Buskirk said at the 7th Fleet's headquarters in Yokosuka,  Japan.
His fleet boasts one carrier - the USS George Washington - along with about 60 other ships and 40,000 sailors and Marines.
Experts  say the drones could be used on any of the 11 U.S. carriers worldwide  and are not being developed exclusively as a counterbalance to China.
But China's reported progress in missile development appears to make the need for them more urgent.
The  DF 21D "carrier killer" missile is designed for launch from land with  enough accuracy to hit a moving aircraft carrier at a distance of more  than 900 miles (1,500 kilometers). Though still unproven - and some  analysts say overrated - no other country has such a weapon.
Current  Navy fighter jets can only operate about 500 nautical miles (900  kilometers) from a target, leaving a carrier within range of the Chinese  missile.
Drones would have an unrefueled  combat radius of 1,500 nautical miles (2,780 kilometers) and could  remain airborne for 50 to 100 hours - versus the 10 hour maximum for a  pilot, according to a 2008 paper by analysts Tom Ehrhard and Robert Work  at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. Work is now an  undersecretary of the Navy.
"Introducing a new  aircraft that promises to let the strike group do its work from beyond  the maximum effective firing range of the anti-ship ballistic missile -  or beyond its range entirely - represents a considerable boost in  defensive potential for the carrier strike group," said James Holmes of  the U.S. Naval War College.
Northrop Grumman  has a six-year, $635.8 million contract to develop two of the planes,  with more acquisitions expected if they work. A prototype of its X-47B  took a maiden 29-minute flight in February at Edwards Air Force Base in  California. Initial testing on carriers is planned for 2013.
Other  makers including Boeing and Lockheed are also in the game. General  Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. - the maker of the Predator drones  used in the Afghan war - carried out wind tunnel tests in February.  Spokeswoman Kimberly Kasitz said it was too early to divulge further  details.
Some experts warn carrier-based drones are still untested and stress that Chinese advances have not rendered carriers obsolete.
"Drones,  if they work, are just the next tech leap. As long as there is a need  for tactical aviation launched from the sea, carriers will be useful  weapons of war," said Michael McDevitt, a former commandant of the  National War College in Washington, D.C., and a retired rear admiral  whose commands included an aircraft carrier battle group.
Some analysts also note that China may be reluctant to instigate any fighting that could interfere with its trade.
Nan  Li, an expert at the U.S. Naval War College's China Maritime Studies  Institute, doubts China would try to attack a U.S. carrier.
"I  am a skeptic of such an interpretation of Chinese strategy," he said.  "But I do think the X-47B may still be a useful preventive capability  for worst-case scenarios."
The Air Force and  Navy both sponsored a project to develop carrier-based drones in the  early 2000s, but the Air Force pulled out in 2005, leaving the Navy to  fund the research.
Adm. Gary Roughhead, chief  of naval operations, said last summer that the current goal of getting a  handful of unmanned bombers in action by 2018 is "too damn slow."
"Seriously,  we've got to have a sense of urgency about getting this stuff out  there," he told a conference. "It could fundamentally change how we  think of naval aviation.
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Note: The viewpoint expressed in this article is solely that of the writer / news outlet. "FATA Awareness Initiative" Team may not agree with the opinion presented.
....................
We Hope You find the info useful. Keep visiting this blog and remember to leave your feedback / comments / suggestions / requests / corrections.
With Regards,
"FATA Awareness Initiative" Team.
 
 
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