SYDNEY J. FREEDBERG JR.
A Marine Corps F-18 Hornet launches from the USS Harry Truman
![](https://sites.breakingmedia.com/uploads/sites/3/2017/04/Marine-F-18-launch-050102-N-2984R-118-1024x731.jpg)
Shanahan took office telling staff his focus is “China, China, China.” Beijing’s growing arsenal of precision-guided missiles seems increasingly able to find and cripple a thousand-foot-long flattop — unless the US carrier stays out of China’s range, in which case the fighter aircraft it carries can’t reach their targets. (Fighters can be refueled in mid-air, but the tanker aircraft required are big, slow, and vulnerable, so they can’t get close to China, either).
The goal isn’t to get rid of carriers, the defense official emphasized. In the vast majority of missions, from disaster relief to counter-terrorism to outright war, a massive mobile air base is extremely useful. The problem is a small but strategically critical set of missions that require engaging China’s massive land-based missile force. In those missions, the official argued, we can’t count on carriers alone and need to add new options to penetrate hundreds of miles of high-tech layered defenses.
Chinese weapons ranges (CSBA graphic)
Carrier advocates argue that even big ships are hard to find in the vast Pacific, that both existing missile defenses like Aegis and new ones like lasers can shoot down incoming Chinese missiles, and that, even if hit, a 100,000-ton carrier can keep fighting. True or not, what matters for deterrence is not what carriers can really do, but what the Chinese believe — and one serving Chinese admiral has publicly boasted that Beijing could win any future war simply by sinking two US carriers.
So the Pentagon wants to make Chinese planning much more complicated, hopefully deterring war, by investing in a much wider range of weapons.
The Sea Hunter, an experimental unmanned submarine-hunter.
![](https://sites.breakingmedia.com/uploads/sites/3/2019/01/ACTUV_ONR_Transition_619x316-300x153.jpg)
A Marine HIMARS missile launcher fires from the deck of the USS Anchorage.
![](https://sites.breakingmedia.com/uploads/sites/3/2018/02/Marine-HIMARS-shipboard-171022-N-GG858-007-300x200.jpg)
USS Harry Truman
![](https://sites.breakingmedia.com/uploads/sites/3/2011/12/navycarrier-300x168.jpg)
The 2020-2024 budget plan due out today would also cut two LPD-class amphibious warships used to land Marines — which have to come even closer to hostile shores than carriers do — and adds a nuclear-powered attack submarine, considered to be the Navy’s most survivable manned vessel.
The budget plan has already inspired fierce battles inside the Pentagon. Shanahan won. Now comes the really hard part: convincing Congress to give up a known quantity that supports thousands of well-paying blue collar jobs and invest in new weapons which don’t yet have a constituency.
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