China is
building one of the world's largest drone fleets aimed at expanding its military
reach in the Pacific and swarming U.S. Navy carriers in the unlikely event of a
war, according to a new report.
The Chinese
military - known as the People's Liberation Army (PLA) - envisions its drone
swarms scouting out battlefields, guiding missile strikes and overwhelming
opponents through sheer numbers.
China's
military-industrial complex has created a wide array of homegrown drones to
accomplish those goals over the past decade, according to the report released by
American think tank Project 2049 Institute on March 11.
"The PLA now
fields one of the world's most expansive UAV [unmanned aerial vehicle] fleets,"
said Ian Easton and L.C. Russell Hsiao, researchers at the Project 2049
Institute and authors of the new report.
U.S. military
forces still operate the largest drone fleet, with at least 679 drones in 2012,
according to data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies
reported by the Guardian. But the new Project 2049 Institute report estimates
that China had 280 military drones as of mid-2011 - a number that has likely
grown since then.
Chinese military
drones have already entered the frontlines of China's territorial disputes with
neighboring countries such as Japan by flying maritime patrols over disputed
areas. The Project 2049 Institute report warned that China could be tempted to
use drones more aggressively without risking human lives, or even consider
"plausibly deniable" drone attacks blamed upon mechanical failure or
cyberhackers.
Chinese
strategists have also discussed using swarms of drones to overwhelm the U.S.
Navy's carrier groups in the unlikely possibility of a shooting war. The drones
could act as decoys, use electronic warfare to jam communications and radar,
guide missile strikes on carriers, fire missiles at U.S. Navy ships or dive into
ships like kamikaze robots.
"In particular,
numerous authoritative studies indicate a strong emphasis on developing UAVs for
locating, tracking and targeting U.S. aircraft carriers in support of long range
anti-ship cruise and ballistic missile strikes," the Project 2049 Institute
report says.
All the main
branches of the Chinese military field operational drone units. The new report
identifies those military units along with major academic, industry and military
organizations involved in building Chinese drones.
The report goes
on to examine the state of Chinese drone technology. China is developing drones
such as the rumored "Dark Sword" stealth drone that have low radar profiles to
escape radar detection. It also wants to build "space" drones that could loiter
at heights of 31 miles (50 kilometers) above the Earth to provide constant
surveillance. (Scientists typically consider 62 miles (100 km) to mark the
boundary for the edge of space.)
Chinese
engineers have even begun working on drones that have the software brains to fly
in formation, do aerial refueling and takeoff and land autonomously -
capabilities that the U.S. military has also developed or begun testing for its
own drones.
The risk of war
between the U.S. and China remains low. But the report cautions that the U.S.
military could prepare for the worst-case scenario by hardening its existing air
bases in Asia and developing energy weapons (such as lasers) for better air and
missile defense. Live Science
The U.S. is
continuing to fuel a drone arms race that guarantees widespread proliferation.
The Atlantic The U.S. Air
Force is developing tiny unmanned drones that will fly in swarms, hover like
bees, crawl like spiders and even sneak up on unsuspecting targets and execute
them with lethal precision. The Daily Mail U.S. troops are
now operating the Switchblade in Afghanistan, one of the most bleeding-edge
lethal drones available, according to Wired. The Switchblade
is AeroVironment’s much-hyped miniature mashup of drone and missile. Most killer
drones are designed like aircraft and fire missiles at a target. The Switchblade
is the missile. Wired The United
States is putting "global stability and international order at risk" by pursuing
a policy of targeted extrajudicial drone strikes against suspected terrorists,
European politicians have warned. The Huffington Post The United
States has carried out more than 360 assassination drone attacks in Pakistan
since 2004, killing over 3,500 people, according to a recent study by the
London-based Bureau of Investigative Journalism.
AHT/HJ