Sailors look at a model of a submarine which is scheduled for delivery to Vietnam in 2013, in Vietnam's northern port city of Hai Phong, in this October 21, 2011 file picture. REUTERS/Kham
A master of guerrilla warfare, Vietnam
has taken possession of two of the state-of-the-art submarines and will get a
third in November under a $2.6 billion deal agreed with Moscow in 2009. A final three are scheduled
to be delivered within two years.
While communist parties rule both Vietnam and China and
annual trade has risen to $50 billion, Hanoi has long been wary of China,
especially over Beijing's claims to most of the potentially energy-rich South
China Sea. Beijing 's placement of an oil rig in
waters claimed by Vietnam
earlier this year infuriated Hanoi
but the coastguard vessels it dispatched to the platform were always chased off
by larger Chinese boats.
The Vietnamese are likely to run so-called area denial
operations off its coast and around its military bases in the Spratly island
chain of the South China Sea once the
submarines are fully operational, experts said.
That would complicate Chinese calculations over any military
move against Vietnamese holdings in the Spratlys or in the event of an armed
clash over disputed oil fields, even though China has a much larger navy,
including a fleet of 70 submarines, they added.
"Sea denial means creating a psychological deterrent by
making sure a stronger naval rival never really knows where your subs might
be," said Collin Koh of Singapore's S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies.
"It is classic asymmetric warfare utilized by the weak
against the strong and something I think the Vietnamese understand very well.
The question is whether they can perfect it in the underwater dimension."
Training runs
Vietnam is not wasting time getting to grips with its
biggest ever arms purchase, the centerpiece of a naval expansion program that
state media has kept largely under wraps.
From the sheltered harbor
of Cam Ranh Bay - home to a massive US military
base during the Vietnam War - the first two submarines have recently been
sighted plying the Vietnamese coast on training runs, according to regional
diplomats.
A Vietnamese crew is training aboard its third Kilo in
waters off St Petersburg ahead of its delivery
to Cam Ranh Bay in November, Russia 's
Interfax news agency reported last month.
And a fourth vessel is undergoing sea trials off the Russian
city's Admiralty Shipyard while the last two are being built.
While regional military attaches and experts are trying to
gauge how quickly Vietnamese crews are mastering the advanced submarines, some
believe it won't be too long before Hanoi starts
sending them further offshore into the South China Sea .
"The Vietnamese have changed the whole scenario – they
already have two submarines, they have the crews and they appear to have the
weapons and their capabilities and experience will be growing from this
point," said Siemon Wezeman, an arms transfer researcher at the Stockholm
International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).
"From the point of view of Chinese assumptions, the
Vietnamese deterrent is already at a point where it must be very real."
As well as possessing shorter-range torpedoes, modern Kilos
while submerged can launch sea-skimming anti-ship missiles that can travel 300
km (188 miles).
Wezeman said SIPRI estimated that Vietnam
had received at least 10 of the 50 Klub anti-ship missiles this year as part of
the deal with Moscow ,
but there was no sign of any purchases of the Klub land-attack variant.
Zhang Baohui, a Chinese security specialist at Hong Kong's Lingnan University ,
said he believed Beijing 's
military planners were concerned about the submarines.
"On a theoretical level, the Vietnamese are at the
point where they could put them to combat use," he said.
Neither China 's
Defense Ministry nor its Foreign Ministry responded to a request for comment.
‘Defensive’ weapons
Senior Vietnamese military officials told Reuters they were
satisfied with progress, saying training at sea and integration of the
submarines into its developing naval force was going smoothly.
They stopped short of confirming whether the first two were
fully operational but stressed they would be used "defensively".
"They are not our sole weapon, but part of a number of
weapons we are developing to better protect our sovereignty. In that regard,
the submarines will be defensive," said one military official in Hanoi who declined to be
identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.
That echoes public comments from Deputy Defense Minister
Nguyen Chi Vinh who has repeatedly stated, without mentioning China directly, that Vietnam
would not start a conflict in the South China Sea
but if one began "we would not just stand back and watch".
Vietnam – a traditional army power – has significantly
expanded its navy in recent years, acquiring modern frigates and corvettes,
mostly from Russia, that are equipped with anti-ship and anti-submarine
weapons.
Vietnam and China have a bloody history, fighting a brief
border war in 1979. They clashed at sea in 1988 when China occupied its first
holdings in the Spratlys. China also took full control of another South China
Sea island chain, the Paracels, after a naval showdown with the then South
Vietnam in 1974.
Former Western submariners watching developments said they
were impressed with the apparent progress despite the enormity of the challenge
for Vietnam in developing a submarine capability from scratch.
By comparison, the Philippines, the other country most at
loggerheads with Beijing in the South China Sea, has no submarines or modern
naval surface ships or significant naval aircraft.
Even before Vietnam took delivery of its first Kilo in
January, Vietnamese submariners had been receiving training in Russia, Hanoi's
Cold War-era patron.
India's navy is also training Vietnamese crews at its INS
Satavahana submarine center in Andhra Pradesh state, an Indian naval official
told Reuters. India has operated Kilos since the mid-1980s.
"It is not just about learning basic operational
considerations, it is about the doctrine and tactics of how best to exploit
these vessels – and making sure you've got a long-term program to build all
this up," one Western submariner said.
More advanced than China's Kilos
The diesel-electric Kilo is considered one of the quietest
submarines and has been constantly refined since the 1980s.
Vasily Kashin, a Moscow-based strategic analyst, said he
believed Vietnam's Kilos were more technologically advanced than the 12 such
vessels operated by China's navy, which obtained its last one a decade ago.
Internal sound absorption had been improved, along with
weapon control and loading systems, he said.
Open source satellite images have shown Kilos alongside new
Russian-built submarine wharves at Cam Ranh Bay, as well as a new dry dock for
repairs. A medical facility for submariners has also been completed nearby,
according to Russian media reports.
Russian personnel are also stationed at a new Russian-built
training center in Cam Ranh, which includes simulators of control, navigation
and weapons systems.
US forces used the bay's sheltered features to build a vast
airport and logistics base at the height of the Vietnam War in the 1960s, when
Cam Ranh was part of the then South Vietnam.
By late 1978 it was in Soviet hands, as a victorious Hanoi
signed over base rights to Moscow. In disrepair through much of the 1990s, the
Russians could not negotiate an extension and departed in 2002.
Across the harbor from the sensitive submarine facilities,
the Vietnamese are expanding ship repair yards they hope will attract a range
of foreign navies at commercial rates.
The US navy has sent several logistics ships for servicing
but a more formal arrangement has yet to be agreed.
Former Western submariners say Cam Ranh's location is
perfect for Vietnam's Kilos.
Not only is it the closest large port to the Spratlys to the
south, it is also within range of the Paracels.
And while much of the South China Sea is shallow and
presents difficult operating conditions for submarines, Cam Ranh is close to
some of the deeper water off the edge of Vietnam's continental shelf.
"No-one should underestimate the Vietnamese – they have
a clear threat and that gives them an extra incentive," said Wezeman of
SIPRI.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/94983/submarines--vietnams-defensive-weapons-against-china-in-disputed-seas
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