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Russia could give China submarine tech that would cut into US undersea dominance, US admiral says

25 November 2024 at 05:08
The Krasnoyarsk nuclear submarine during a flag-rising ceremony at the Arctic port of Severodvinsk on December 11, 2023.
Russia will likely provide submarine technology to China, US Adm. Samuel Paparo said.

KIRILL IODAS/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

  • Russia could hand China technology that would cut into US undersea dominance, a US admiral said.
  • Adm. Samuel Paparo said that he expected Russia to also do the same for North Korea.
  • At a security forum, he said exchanges among Russia, Iran, North Korea, and China have intensified.

Adm. Samuel Paparo, the US Navy's top commander in the Indo-Pacific, said that Russia will likely give submarine technology to China that would undercut the US' undersea dominance.

Paparo, speaking at the Halifax Security Forum over the weekend, raised concerns about the two countries' military partnership.

"I expect Russia to provide submarine technology to the PRC that has the potential of closing American undersea dominance," he said, using the acronym for the People's Republic of China.

Undersea dominance is key for the US, especially in the Indo-Pacific, which includes the waters around Taiwan and the South China Sea.

China has grown increasingly assertive in the region in recent months, repeatedly crossing into the airspace and waters of Taiwan, a key US partner, and carrying out maritime gray-zone operations against the Philippines, an ally the US is treaty-bound to defend.

While the US Navy has one of the world's largest submarine fleets, China has the largest maritime fighting force.

At the same time, China has "helped rebuild Russia's war machine with 90% of its semiconductors and 70% of the machine tools that have rebuilt that war machine," Paparo said.

He described these bilateral military exchanges as a "certain transactional symbiosis" in which each country fulfills the needs of the others.

"This is a dangerous environment, and this is adding complexity to the environment itself," Paparo said, adding that the US needs to rethink its strategy in view of these exchanges.

He said that one way the US is already doing this is by sharing real-time intelligence with Japan and South Korea in their command and control networks and ballistic missile defenses.

According to Paparo, Russia is not only exchanging military capability and technology with China but also with North Korea and Iran.

North Korea has provided Russia with artillery and up to 11,000 soldiers to help its army against Ukraine, while Iran has transferred ballistic missiles and Shahed drones to Russia to aid its war efforts.

In return, according to Paparo, Russia would likely provide missile and submarine technology to the North Korean state.

However, the growing alliance between Russia and North Korea appears to be putting a strain on Sino-Russian relations.

Kurt Campbell, the US deputy secretary of state, said last week that China is increasingly concerned about the alliance between Kim Jong Un and Vladimir Putin.

He said that China has not directly criticized Russia, "but we do believe that the increasing coordination between Pyongyang and Moscow is unnerving them."

Read the original article on Business Insider

US admiral says sending Israel and Ukraine weapons like Patriot missiles is eating into what's needed for countering China

19 November 2024 at 22:37
An American-made Patriot missile is launched during a live-fire exercise in Taiwan in August 2024.
The US has sent at least two Patriot missile systems to Ukraine, which has repeatedly asked for the prized air defense batteries.

SAM YEH/AFP via Getty Images

  • Adm. Sam Paparo is concerned that the US is giving out vital defenses it needs to deal with China.
  • "It's now eating into stocks," he said on Tuesday of advanced weapon shipments to Ukraine and Israel.
  • Paparo urged the Pentagon to start replenishing those stocks and expand beyond its original inventory.

The US Navy's top commander in the Indo-Pacific raised concerns on Tuesday that the Pentagon's advanced weapons shipments to Ukraine and Israel could sap the strength it needs to deal with China.

While speaking at the Brookings Institution, Adm. Samuel Paparo said he initially hadn't been concerned with the weapons sent to the Middle East and Europe.

"Up to this year, where most of the employment of weapons were really artillery pieces and short-range weapons, I had said: 'Not at all,'" said Paparo, who's been commander of US Indo-Pacific Command since May.

"But now, with some of the Patriots that have been employed, some of the air-to-air missiles that have been employed, it's now eating into stocks," he added. "And to say otherwise would be dishonest."

In the last year, the US has been parceling out more sophisticated systems to Israel and Ukraine from its inventory. For example, it's sent Kyiv at least two Patriot systems and an undisclosed number of missiles while deploying a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system โ€” one out of the six in its arsenal โ€” in Israel.

Israel has its own Patriot systems bought from the US and has said it's retiring them in favor of a newer type of air defense.

Paparo said advanced weapons aren't reserved for any particular theater of US command but that deploying them in the Middle East and Europe affects the Pentagon's worldwide "high-end capability."

"Inherently, it imposes costs on the readiness of America to respond in the Indo-Pacific region, which is the most stressing theater for the quantity and quality of munitions, because the PRC is the most capable potential adversary in the world," Paparo said, referring to the People's Republic of China.

His solution is to spend more on building up US inventory.

"We should replenish those stocks, and then some," Paparo said. "I was already dissatisfied with the magazine depth. I'm a little more dissatisfied with the magazine depth. You know, it's a time for straight talk."

Paparo's warning echoes concerns from a formal congressional review published in July that found that US inventory may be severely lacking in scale for a war against Russia, China, or both simultaneously.

In particular, the commissioners voiced a worry that the US could expend its munitions in three to four weeks, citing war games held to simulate potential battles in the Indo-Pacific.

Some important ammunition like anti-ship missiles could run out in days, the review also said.

Like Paparo, the review called for expanding and revitalizing US weapons production to produce higher quantities of advanced arms.

Some in the Pentagon say there isn't much time left to do so. Adm. John Aquilino, Paparo's predecessor at Indopacific Command, said in March that China could be ready to invade Taiwan as early as 2027.

In January last year, US Air Force Gen. Mike Miniham told officers in a memo that he personally felt Beijing could go to war in 2025. The four-star general retired in September.

The US has budgeted about $850 billion this year for defense, and observers expect costs to approach $1 trillion a year in the coming decade.

Press teams for the Pentagon and Indo-Pacific Command did not respond to requests for comment sent outside regular business hours by Business Insider.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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