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US vs. Chinese cruisers: China is building its top surface warship at breakneck speed, and it's a match for its US rival

The US's Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruiser, at left, is now rivaled, if not topped, by China's Type 055 "Renhai" cruiser.
The US's Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruiser, at left, is now rivaled, if not topped, by China's Type 055 "Renhai" cruiser.

Lt.j.g Samuel Hardgrove/US Navy and Sun Zifa/China News Service via Getty Images

  • China's new Type 055 cruiser is its most modern and powerful surface combatant.
  • The ship China labels as a destroyer is so large it compares more to US cruisers.
  • China is building these ships fast while the US sunsets most of its aging cruisers.

China's navy has a menacing new addition to its naval fleet: the Type 055 class guided missile destroyer.

The destroyer is the most modern and potent surface combatant in China's navy, officially known as the People's Liberation Army Navy. Designed for multiple missions and fitted with a massive arsenal and advanced electronics, it is an apex predator in the PLAN's growing fleet meant to protect China's carriers from harm.

The class is so daunting and capable that the US Department of Defense classifies it as a cruiser. Many observers compare it to the US Navy's own cruisers, which have performed a similar role.

"Depending on your criteria, the Type 055 is the best or second-best surface combatant in the world," Chris Carlson, a retired US Navy captain and naval analyst told Business Insider.

And while the US Navy seeks to divest from its aging cruiser fleet, China is expanding its fleet at a breakneck pace.

Type 055 'Renhai'

The commissioning of the first-in-class Nanchang in 2020 revealed China had launched one of the world's top surface combatants. China may build up to 16 of them.
The commissioning of the first-in-class Nanchang in 2020 revealed China had launched one of the world's top surface combatants. China may build up to 16 of them.

Fu Tian/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images

China's desire for a massive surface combatant dates back to the 1960s. China initiated an "055" program in the mid-1970s, then canceled it in 1983 due to weaknesses in its industrial base and technological know-how.

Three decades later, however, China's booming economy enabled its shipbuilding industry to become the largest in the world. It emphasized modernizing the navy and building or acquiring fleet oilers, nuclear submarines, guided missile warships, aircraft carriers, and more.

The keel of the first Type 055, Nanchang, was laid in December 2014, just three months before the keel of China's first domestically built carrier, Shandong, was laid.

When Nanchang was commissioned in 2020, it made the class a force to be reckoned with. Measuring 590 feet long and displacing 12,000-13,000 tons, it is the largest class of surface combatant China has ever built.

Each Type 055, which NATO classifies as the Renhai-class, is fitted with 112 vertical launch system (VLS) cells, which launch missiles. Sixty-four cells are positioned forward of the bridge in an 8x8 configuration and 48 are located aft in a 6x8 configuration. These VLS cells have both cold and hot launch capability, enabling them to field a more diverse missile arsenal; in a cold launch, a missile is ejected from the cell via pressurized gas before its engine fires.

That arsenal includes YJ-18 anti-ship cruise missiles, CJ-10 land-attack cruise missiles, and HHQ-9 surface-to-air missiles (SAMs), which have ranges of around 335 miles, 497 miles, and 124 miles, respectively. The class may also be able to carry Yu-8 anti-submarine missiles.

In 2022, China tested a cold launch of a YJ-21 hypersonic missile from a Type 055's VLS cells. The missile reportedly has an approximate range of 932 miles, a cruising speed of Mach 6, and a terminal speed of Mach 10,Β which makes it challenging to intercept.

The Type 055 also features a single box launcher with 25 HHQ-10 short-range SAMs, four Type 726 defensive launchers capable of launching chaff, flares, and decoys, 2 triple-tubed torpedo launchers with Yu-7 torpedoes, a single 11-barelled H/PJ-11 Close-in weapon system (CIWS), and a H/PJ-38 130 mm naval gun.

At the stern, a helicopter deck and hangar can house two helicopters capable of tracking submarines and helping with logistics.

The Type 055 is also brimming with modern radars, sensors, and other electronics. This includes four Type 346B Dragon Eye S-band active electronically scanned array (AESA) radars mounted on the superstructure and four X-band radars housed in an integrated mast, making it the first Chinese warship with dual-band planar radar arrays. Its hull-mounted sonar can be enhanced by towed active array sonars.

With its arsenal and sensor/electronic suite, the Type 055 can take on an anti-ship, anti-submarine, anti-air, or land-attack role, making it the best candidate for a carrier escort. It's also capable of operating as a command flagship for any PLAN surface action group without a carrier.

The US Department of Defense has speculated that China wants to incorporate ballistic missile defense (BMD) systems on the Type 055, which could enable it to serve in a BMD/anti-satellite role similar to Japan's BMD destroyers.

Eight Type 055s are in service. At least three more are reportedly in varying stages of construction. China may build as many as 16 Type 055s in total.

Despite its young age, the class has already gained a reputation as one of the best surface combatants in the world.

"I'd say the Type 055 is the most capable in anti-surface warfare, but not as capable in the air defense and BMD role as a US [Arleigh] Burke DDG," Carlson, the retired US Navy captain, said. He said the Type 055's strike and ASW capabilities are about the same as its American counterpart.

Ticonderoga-class

Cruisers like the USS Normandy play key roles in carrier strike groups.
Cruisers like the USS Normandy play key roles in carrier strike groups.

MC2 Malachi Lakey/US Navy

The size, armament, and mission of the Type 055 are often compared to the US Navy's Ticonderoga-class cruiser. Measuring 567 feet long, displacing around 10,000 tons, and first entering service in 1983, the ships of the class are considerably older and smaller than the Type 055s.

But the Ticonderogas are no less potent and have a larger missile arsenal, with two sets of 61 Mk 41 VLS cells able to carry 122 missiles and two quad-tubed Mk-141 launchers at the stern.

Two Mark 45 5-inch guns are present at the stem and stern, as well as two Phalanx CIWS' and two triple-tubed Mark 32 torpedo tubes capable of firing Mk 46 or Mk 50 torpedoes. A helicopter hangar capable of housing two MH-60R Seahawk helicopters provides additional ASW capability.

The exact makeup of each Ticonderoga's missile arsenal is dependent on its mission, as it is capable of carrying a host of different missiles. These include Tomahawk cruise missiles for ground targets, Harpoon anti-ship missiles for hostile ships, and RUM-139 VL-ASROC anti-submarine missiles for enemy subs.

The missiles have ranges of up to 1,500 miles, 149 miles, and 10 miles respectively.

The Ticonderoga's main role, however, is air defense. It can carry a wide range of anti-air missiles, including Evolved Sea Sparrow SAMs, and all active variants of the Standard Missile family; the SM-2 Blocks III, IIIA, IIIB, and IV; the SM-3, and the SM-6.

Those missiles, which can intercept targets ranging from 35 miles to over 200, enable the Ticonderoga to provide an effective air defense umbrella against low- and high-altitude threats, including helicopters, drones, jets, and missiles.

In 2008, an SM-3 fired from the cruiser USS Lake Erie destroyed a defunct satellite at an altitude of some 150 miles, demonstrating its ability to perform anti-satellite missions.

Another defining asset of the Ticonderogas is the AN/SPY-1 passive phased array radar β€” a vital component of the AEGIS Combat System, an advanced and integrated naval defense system that combines command, detecting, tracking, and weapons control for comprehensive management of air, surface, and submarine threats, and which the Ticonderogas were the first ships to employ.

Twenty-seven Ticonderoga-class cruisers were built between 1980 and 1994, but only nine are in active service today.

Cruiser gap?

The US Navy is moving to retire most of its nine cruisers in the coming years.
The US Navy is moving to retire most of its nine cruisers in the coming years.

MC2 Indra Beaufort/US Navy

The importance of the Ticonderoga and the Type 055 to their respective fleets is hard to overstate. Their displacement, arsenal size, and ability to perform multiple missions and operate as flagships puts them at the top of the list of most important surface combatants β€” second, perhaps, only to the carriers.

In an acknowledgment of their capability, the US Department of Defense officially designates the Type 055 as a cruiser, despite China's own designation of destroyer, which is likely a PR move intended to make the PLAN seem less aggressive. (Destroyers typically have smaller displacements and arsenals than cruisers and play a less prominent role in the fleet.)

Consequently, their deployments are carefully monitored, with their standalone voyages seen as intentional shows of strength.

Type 055s have sailed in the waters off Alaska in 2021, 2022, and 2024, including as part of joint Chinese-Russian patrols. Recently, a Type 055 visited the island nation of Vanuatu, signaling to some that China was trying to increase its presence in the South Pacific.

The Ticonderogas have also been on the move. In 2022, the cruiser USS Port Royal sailed through the Taiwan Strait in a sign to China. More recently, in June, USS Normandy participated in a show of strength off Norway, and in September, USS Bunker Hill took part in a massive five-nation drill in the South China Sea.

Though both navies currently have nine cruisers in active service, this will not be the case for long. While China has only just entered the cruiser game, the US Navy has been seeking to decommission its cruisers for years.

The Navy argues that the cruisers have approached, passed, or will soon pass their expected service lives and that the cost of keeping the ships up and running is draining the service of funds and shipyard space.

In 2021, for instance, USS Vella Gulf lasted just one week into a deployment before leaks in a fuel tank required it to return to port. More mechanical problems were soon uncovered, and the ship spent two months undergoing repairs before it could rejoin its carrier strike group.

Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro has even testified to Congress that some of the ships were unsafe. A modernization effort for seven cruisers, meanwhile, went as much as 200% over budget and fell years behind schedule.

The Navy wants to divest from ships it says it doesn't need and invest in new vessels that it argues can adequately fill in for the role of the Ticonderogas in the 21st century, like the new Flight III variant of the Arleigh Burke-class destroyers.

But Congress has so far rejected the Navy's plans to retire all of its remaining cruisers due to fears that they play too important a role in countering China, whose increasing might could be a means to try to seize the island of Taiwan by force.

Four Ticonderogas β€” Vicksburg, Cowpens, Leyte Gulf, and Antietam β€” were decommissioned in the last year. On November 4, Del Toro announced that the Navy would operate three cruisers planned to be decommissioned in 2026 into 2029, effectively extending their service lives. The rest are planned to be decommissioned before then.

China, meanwhile, will continue building Type 055s at rates virtually unthinkable to US shipyards.

Benjamin Brimelow is a freelance journalist covering international military and defense issues. He holds a master's degree in Global Affairs with a concentration in international security from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. His work has appeared in Business Insider and the Modern War Institute at West Point.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Take a look inside Camp David, where presidents host world leaders and escape Washington

George W. Bush Lee Myung Bak Camp David
Then-US President George W. Bush, right, and then-South Korean President Lee Myung Bak laugh as they leave their joint news conference after their meeting at Camp David on April 19, 2008.

Dennis Brack-Pool/Getty Images

  • Camp David has been a destination for presidential rest and relaxation since it opened.
  • The camp has also been the site of meetings and summits with various world leaders over the years.
  • Camp David has been the site of some big national and foreign policy decisions.

Nestled in the countryside of Maryland, in theΒ Catoctin Mountain Park, is the presidentialΒ country retreat known as Camp David.

The first parts of the complex were built by the Works Progress Administration in 1935, and Franklin D. Roosevelt made it the presidential retreat. FDR originally named the property "Shangri-La," a name it kept until the Eisenhower administration, who named it Camp David after his grandson.

The compound has expanded over the years, with new cabins being built and even a pool. It has also been the site of diplomatic events like the Camp David Accords in 1978 and the G8 summit in 2012.

Here's a look inside Camp David, where presidents go to escape Washington.

The original name of Camp David was Shangri-La, the name of a fictional Himalayan paradise in the 1933 novel "Lost Horizon."
Shangri La_sign
The original sign to Camp David during President Franklin D. Roosevelt's term.

National Park Service

When President Dwight D. Eisenhower took office, he renamed the property "Camp David," after his father and grandson who had the same name.
Camp david sign
David Eisenhower, the grandson of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, poses with a sign named in his honor in 1960.

White House

By the end of the Eisenhower administration, Camp David looked like this. The president's cabin β€” Aspen Lodge β€” was originally called the Bear's Den by FDR.
Camp David Aspen Lodge
Camp David's Aspen Lodge in April 1961.

Robert Knudsen. White House Photographs. John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston.

From the beginning, Camp David gave presidents a chance to enjoy the countryside.
FDR and Churchill Camp David
FDR and Winston Churchill are pictured fishing at Shangri-La in 1943.

FDR Presidential Library & Museum/Flickr

Here, FDR and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill fish in the woods around "Shangri La." The two men reportedly planned the D-Day invasion from a porch on one of the cabins.

Since Camp David is in the Catoctin Mountain Park, it has a number of trails around it that presidents and their families can enjoy.
Camp David 19
President Jimmy Carter, holding the hand of his grandson Jason, leads members of the Carter family and others on a holiday outing to Cunningham Falls State Park near Camp David on November 25, 1978.

Associated Press

Horseback riding is also a common activity for the trails, as seen here with President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George Bush.
Camp David 5
President Ronald Reagan, left, and Vice President George Bush go horseback riding at Camp David in July 1981.

Associated Press

Originally, the pool at Camp David was far from Aspen Lodge. President Lyndon B. Johnson can be seen enjoying the pool with family, friends, and staff.
Screen Shot 2018 02 12 at 5.17.35 PM

TheLBJLibrary/YouTube

Here's another shot of Johnson at the Camp David pool.
Screen Shot 2018 02 12 at 5.16.12 PM

TheLBJLibrary/YouTube

President Richard Nixon added a pool behind the Aspen Lodge in the 1970s. President Barack Obama apparently still enjoyed it decades later.
obama camp david
President Barack Obama and his daughter Sasha play at the Camp David pool in 2011.

White House

Obama White House photographer Pete Souza snapped a number of great behind-the-scenes shots of life at Camp David, which also has tennis and basketball courts.
3818163594_a2df503b85_o
President Barack Obama plays basketball with senior staff and their family members during a retreat at Camp David on July 18, 2009.

Obama White House/Flickr

As well as a pool table.
Barack Obama Pool Camp David
Following the conclusion of the G8 Summit, President Barack Obama plays a game of pool in the Holly Cabin at Camp David on May 19, 2012.

Official White House Photo by Pete Souza

Camp David can provide a relaxing setting for presidents to do their work, away from the chaos of Washington.
Obama camp david
President Barack Obama reads briefing material while meeting with advisors inside his cabin at Camp David on October 21, 2012.

Obama White House/Flickr

Many presidents have spent Christmas at Camp David.
George Bush X mas camp david
Lauren Bush shows her grandfather President Bush, her Rudolph costume for the grandchildren's Christmas play as he works in his office at the presidential retreat in Camp David on December 24, 1992.

Associated Press

It's pretty nice in winter too.
Camp David Aspen Lodge Snow Sledding
Three unidentified children sled down the hill outside Aspen Lodge, the Presidential residence at Camp David, on February 10, 1962.

Robert Knudsen. White House Photographs. John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston.

President Jimmy Carter turned Camp David into a place where diplomacy was conducted, like the landmark Camp David Accords in 1978.
Camp David 17
Egyptian President Anwar El Sadat, President Jimmy Carter, and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, meet for the first time at Camp David on September 6, 1978.

Associated Press

Like Carter, President Bill Clinton used Camp David as a location for talks between Israel and Palestine.
Camp David 4
President Clinton, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, left, and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, right, walk on the grounds of Camp David on July 11, 2000.

Associated Press

Obama also used Camp David as a place for diplomatic events.
Camp David 1
President Barack Obama waves to cameras before greeting world leaders for the G8 Summit Friday on May 18, 2012.

Associated Press

In 2012, he hosted the leaders of the G8 nations at Camp David.
Camp David 2
President Barack Obama, center right, sits with world leaders at the start of the first session of the G-8 Summit Saturday, May 19, 2012, at Camp David, Md. Seated, clockwise from left, are Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, French President Francois Hollande, Obama, British Prime Minister David Cameron, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, and European Commission President Jose' Manuel Barroso, back to camera.

Associated Press

It's not all work, though. European leaders took a break during the 2012 G8 to watch the overtime shootout of the Chelsea vs. Bayern Munich Champions League final.
Barack Obama David Cameron Angela Merkel
At Camp David for the G8 Summit, European leaders took a break to watch the overtime shootout of the Chelsea vs. Bayern Munich Champions League final. Prime Minister David Cameron of the United Kingdom, the President, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission, French President François Hollande react during the winning goal on May 19, 2012.

Official White House Photo by Pete Souza

President Donald Trump visited Camp David five times in his first year in office, calling it "a very special place" in one tweet.
Camp David 3
President Donald Trump walks towards Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House to travel to Camp David on January 5, 2018.

Associated Press

In January 2018, Trump brought senior Republicans to Camp David for a leadership retreat.
Donald Trump Mitch McConnell Mike Pompeo Mike Pence Kevin McCarthy Steve Scalise Rex Tillerson
President Donald Trump, center, accompanied by from left, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., Vice President Mike Pence, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of Calif., House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, speaks after participating in a Congressional Republican Leadership Retreat at Camp David, Md., Saturday, Jan. 6, 2018.

AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

During his presidency, Trump frequented his properties more than Camp David.
U.S. President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago home in Palm Beach, Florida.
Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Before taking office, Trump once told a German journalist in an interview, "Camp David is very rustic, it's nice, you'd like it. You know how long you'd like it? For about 30 minutes."

By August 2020, Trump had made 500 visits to his properties. Of those 500, Trump had visited Mar-A-Lago 134 times.Β 

Comparatively, Trump visited Camp David five times in his first year in office, according to USA Today. He visited his golf clubs 150 times in his first year.Β 

Sources: Washington Post, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, USA Today

President Joe Biden made his first trip to Camp David three weeks into his presidency for Valentine's Day weekend in 2021.
US President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden disembark Marine One at Fort McNair in Washington, DC,
President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden disembark Marine One at Fort McNair in Washington.

STEFANI REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images

Source: Reuters

Biden was at Camp David during the withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan.
U.S. President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris (on screen) hold a video conference with the national security team to discuss the ongoing efforts to draw down our civilian footprint in Afghanistan
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris (on-screen) hold a video conference with the national security team to discuss the ongoing efforts to draw down our civilian footprint in Afghanistan.

White House via Getty Images

He spent 72 hours at Camp David and cut his trip short to return to the White House and address the nation.Β 

Source: Washington Post

In February 2023, Biden and his team prepared for his State of the Union address from Camp David.
President Joe Biden prepares for his State of the Union address in February 2023.
President Joe Biden prepares for his upcoming State of the Union address.

Official White House Photo by Adam Schultz

Source: CBS News

Biden and his family spent the Fourth of July weekend at Camp David in 2023.
President Joe Biden arrives at Fort Lesley J. McNair after spending the weekend at Camp David.
President Joe Biden arrives at Fort Lesley J. McNair after spending a weekend at Camp David.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Biden called for a "new era of cooperation" with Japan and South Korea.
Joe Biden at Camp David.
President Joe Biden, center, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, left, and then-Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida hold a joint news conference at Camp David on August 18, 2023.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

President Joe Biden held a joint news conference with South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, left, and then-Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida at Camp David on August 18, 2023.

"This is the first summit I've hosted at Camp David as president. I can think of no more fitting location to begin the next era of cooperation," Biden said at the time. "In the months and years ahead, we're going to continue to seize those possibilities together β€” unwavering in our unity and unmatched in our resolve."

Biden gathered with close family members at Camp David in June 2024.
Biden
President Joe Biden exits Air Force One en route to Camp David.

AP Photo/Susan Walsh

President Joe Biden leaned on his family during a difficult stretch of his campaign following his first debate with former President Donald Trump. (In July 2024, Biden stepped aside as the Democratic nominee, paving the way for the eventual nomination of Vice President Kamala Harris as the party's standard bearer.)

Trump won a second term in November 2024 and come January 2025, it'll once again be the president-elect's turn to utilize the retreat.

Editor's note: This story was first published in February 2018 and has been updated with recent information.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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