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Lessons from the Changing Geometry of PLA Navy

Carrier Ops
Improving aircraft carrier capabilities are shifting where China’s Navy can operate in the
western Pacific..
By Commander Michael Dahm, U.S. Navy (Retired)

The details of China’s recent aircraft carrier operations provide some necessary
perspective on the burgeoning capabilities of the People’s Liberation Army Navy
(PLAN). Technical capabilities are not sufficient; how and where the PLAN operates
must be considered. Beyond simple math—ship tonnage, salvo rates, and weapon
ranges—what matters in a comprehensive net assessment of competing military forces
are operational capabilities and geometry. China’s demonstrated intent to operate at
long ranges from the Chinese coast signals how the PLAN may fundamentally change
threat geometry in the Pacific as its operational capabilities improve.

PLAN Air Force (PLANAF) J-15 Flanker-X2 fighters first landed on board the Chinese
aircraft carrier Liaoning on 25 November 2012. I was an assistant U.S. naval attaché
to Beijing at the time. At a diplomatic reception, I congratulated my PLAN colleagues
on joining the elite group of aircraft carrier–capable navies. They humbly downplayed
my compliments. The Chinese officers understood that U.S. Navy achievements in
carrier aviation had come at a high cost in aircraft and lives. The PLAN has proceeded
cautiously in developing its carrier program since then. Ten years on, while a few J-
15s have been reported lost in training accidents, the PLAN apparently has yet to suffer
a major flight-deck incident.

The PLAN has since claimed the title of the world’s largest navy. Chinese Communist
Party Chairman and President Xi Jinping has pressed his military to increase the
realism of training, ostensibly to prepare to “fight and win wars.” Each month, the media
seems to reveal a new Chinese missile or report the launch of yet another combatant.
In December 2019, the PLAN commissioned its second aircraft carrier, the Shandong.
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The Type 002 Shandong, with its ski-jump bow to assist aircraft takeoff, is a
domestically produced copy of the Soviet-era Kuznetsov-class carrier that was refitted
to create the Type 001 Liaoning. In June 2022, China launched its Type 003 aircraft
carrier, Fujian, a flat-deck carrier that reportedly employs electromagnetic catapults in
lieu of the ski-jump design. However, for all this apparent progress in naval force
structure, the PLAN is still growing its operational capabilities to use new technologies
to full effect.

Chinese military analysts have heralded recent Liaoning strike group deployments to
the western Pacific as featuring “intensive aircraft sorties” and evidence of a “high
combat capability.”1 Even the relatively new Shandong has reportedly conducted its
first “realistic combat-oriented exercises” in the South China Sea.2 However, a close
examination of these recent exercises shows the PLAN continues to conduct carrier
operations with an abundance of caution. These operations reveal the changing
geometry of naval operating areas in East Asia and how they could generate
advantages and risks.

Flight Ops Geometry

The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) provides reliable public reporting on
how and where the PLA has been operating in the East China and Philippine
Seas.3 Based on this, the PLAN might have achieved another naval aviation milestone:
blue-water aircraft carrier operations. “Blue-water ops” is shorthand for conducting
carrier fixed-wing flight operations outside the unrefueled range of a divert airfield, a
place to land if an aircraft cannot return to the ship. Any number of maintenance issues
or damage to either the aircraft or the carrier might preclude a safe recovery.
Conducting true blue-water ops is a high-risk endeavor. The only outcomes are either
a 100 percent onboard recovery rate or losing an aircraft.

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According to the JMSDF, during a December 2021 training deployment to the
Philippine Sea, the Liaoning conducted fixed-wing flight operations more than 700
nautical miles (nm) from the Chinese mainland on at least two occasions. In May 2022,
on a more substantial three-week training deployment to the Philippine Sea,
the Liaoning conducted about half its flight operations between 500 and 600 nm from
China. The other flying days occurred in an area east of Taiwan, still a respectable
300–400 nm from a divert airfield.

There is some question about how risky PLAN blue-water ops were, or if they were
“blue-water” at all. China’s J-15, a reverse-engineered copy of Russia’s Su-33, is
marginally larger than the venerable U.S. F/A-18E/F Super Hornet—10 percent longer
and wider, with 40 percent more wing area. The J-15’s 20,000 pounds of internal fuel
stores purportedly give the J-15 an impressive high-altitude transit range of more than
1,600 nm.4 Assuming low-intensity flight operations relatively close to the carrier, a J-

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15 theoretically would be able to reach the Chinese mainland from 700 nm if it
maintained a 50 percent fuel reserve. J-15s also have demonstrated limited proficiency
in air-to-air refueling, using the Russian UPAZ-1A fuel pod for fighter-to-fighter “buddy
tanking.”5 The large, center-mounted tanks were not seen in photos or videos
of Liaoning flight operations, nor were there any reports of PLA Air Force (PLAAF) H-
6 or Y-20 air-to-air tankers from the mainland supporting carrier flight operations.

The PLAN likely pursued cautious, low-intensity flight operations to maximize aircraft
fuel reserves for a divert and reduce overall risk to carrier operations. JMSDF photos
and PLA video of the deployment showed J-15s either flew “clean,” without any drag-
inducing external stores or with a few relatively light air-to-air missiles. No large
payloads involving air-to-surface weapons, drop tanks, or pods were noted. Japanese
officials reported the Liaoning conducted more than 300 aircraft sorties during the May
2022 deployment.6 Over the 12 days of reported flight ops, that averages to fewer than
20 fighter sorties per day, combined with dozens of helicopter flights throughout the
deployment. Chinese military commentators declared this to be a “decent number” of
sorties for training.7 For some perspective on those numbers, the U.S. aircraft carrier
USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) recently set a record for completing 170 sorties in eight
and a half hours of training.8

The Fujian, China’s first indigenously designed and built aircraft carrier, at its launch in June 2022. At between 70,000 and 80,000 tons, the
Fujian is also China’s first supercarrier. The long garages on the foredeck cover the carrier’s forward catapults, which reportedly use an
electromagnetic system like that on the U.S. Navy’s newest carriers. Alamy

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The map of the Liaoning’s movements in the Philippine Sea shows the Chinese carrier
purposefully conducted flight operations just outside of Japan and Taiwan’s air defense
identification zones (ADIZ). An ADIZ is not territorial airspace but represents an area
in which a nation has declared it will identify and intercept unidentified or threatening
aircraft. Chinese carrier operations east and south of these zones stress Japan and
Taiwan’s air defenses. For example, during the recent Liaoning deployments, Japan
Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF) fighters based on Okinawa would have had to fly
intercepts up to 250 nm to the southeast corner of their ADIZ while still maintaining
vigilance for threats from mainland China. A PLA video of the Liaoning’s December
2021 deployment featured images of a JASDF F-15 fighter viewed from the cockpit of
a PLAN J-15.9 Chinese and Japanese fighters operating so close to one another,
especially in the Philippine Sea, is a rare and somewhat concerning development. The
range and geometry of the Liaoning’s flight operations help explain why Japan sent
one of its own carriers to shadow the PLAN deployment in May 2022.10

Scores of PLA land-based aircraft that entered Taiwan’s ADIZ in May 2022 were likely
designed to test how Taiwan responded when faced with threats approaching from
both east and west. On 6 May, as the Liaoning moved into position east of Taiwan, a
dozen land-based PLA fighter-bombers entered Taiwan’s southwest ADIZ.11 At the end
of the deployment, on 18 May, two H-6J bombers swept through the Philippine Sea,
likely simulating the clearance of exercise “enemy” forces before the Liaoning strike
group transited back to the East China Sea.12

The support the Chinese carrier received from land-based PLA airborne radar and
maritime patrol aircraft highlights one of the most critical geometries for modern naval
operations: elevation and the advantages of looking down on the battlespace. The
curve of the Earth limits a ship’s ability to detect low-altitude or surface targets beyond
the horizon. Large, heavy radar-surveillance aircraft such as the U.S. Navy’s E-2D
Hawkeye are unable to launch from Chinese carrier ski jumps. The Liaoning operates
Z-18 helicopters equipped with a 360-degree airborne radar. Z-18s are unable to
operate for long periods or at high altitudes for increased radar range. These critical

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limits on battlespace awareness will change in the coming years as the catapults on
China’s Type 003 Fujian carrier will allow it to launch the recently revealed KJ-600
airborne early warning and control aircraft, which bears a striking resemblance to the
E-2D.13

Missile-Defense Geometry

A J-15 test aircraft flying with a UPAZ buddy-refueling pod on its belly. Such systems allow fighter-to-fighter
refueling.

Aircraft carriers have arguably been the centerpiece of U.S. naval strategy since World
War II. The PLAN is certainly drawn to the international prestige of operating aircraft
carriers. However, the centerpiece of PLAN strategy, especially over the next decade,
will likely continue to be the strike capabilities of its surface combatants and
submarines.

Seven PLAN ships accompanied the Liaoning on its May 2022 deployment to the
Philippine Sea: one Type 055 Renhai cruiser, three Type 052D Luyang III destroyers,

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one Type 052C Luyang II destroyer, one Type 054A Jiangkai II frigate, and a Type 901
Fuyu supply ship—a new large, high-speed auxiliary built to support carrier strike group
deployments. It is unknown if a Chinese submarine accompanied the formation.

The cruiser and destroyers’ possessed a total of 352 vertical launch system cells,
containing a likely mix of land-attack cruise missiles (CJ-10, range: 1080 nm), anti-ship
cruise missiles (YJ-18A, range: 290 nm, or YJ-100, range: 432 nm), and surface-to-air
missiles (HHQ-9A or B, range: 81 nm or 108 nm).14 In addition, in April 2022, video
emerged of a missile launch from a Renhai cruiser that analysts speculate is a YJ-21
ship-launched ballistic missile, possibly an antiship ballistic missile of undetermined
range.15 The ski-jump-launched fighters provide an air-defense umbrella, leaving
power projection and striking capabilities—at least for the near term—to Chinese ships
and missile-capable submarines.

Deployments of strike groups to the Philippine Sea and elsewhere beyond the first
island chain certainly represent a “defense in depth” strategy for the PLAN. With this,
PLAN forces can engage advancing fleets at greater range from the Chinese mainland.
These deployments also complicate missile-defense geometry for naval forces and
bases in Japan, Taiwan, and the Philippines. A diverse array of PLA missiles
simultaneously attacking at different speeds from different altitudes already represents
an exceedingly complex challenge. Adding missile approach vectors from shooters
positioned in the Philippine Sea adds complexity, further challenging purportedly
anemic U.S. missile defenses.16 If correct, alleged significant shortfalls in U.S. missile-
defense funding and capabilities mean current protections against complex integrated
attacks will continue to erode in the face of this increasingly diverse operational
geometry.

Doing the Math


China’s navy is evolving at an astonishing rate. The increase in force structure alone
offers legitimate cause for concern, if not alarm. A few years ago, China had one
aircraft carrier. Now it has three. The PLAN is also clearly pushing out into new
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operating areas to extend its reach and potentially improve its lethality. However,
recent PLAN operations suggest that, for all the rhetoric, the PLAN is still not truly
comfortable behind the wheel of its aircraft carriers.

Among the most significant, if underappreciated, factors limiting current PLAN


operations is the experience of its personnel. During a trip to the United States with the
Chinese chief of naval operations, the first commanding officer of
the Liaoning complained to me about the personnel challenges he faced on his ship.
Several years into China’s carrier program, for many jobs on board the ship, he had
two officers or sailors in each billet. The berthing issues alone were exceedingly
frustrating.17 With only one carrier, the Liaoning had to train the entire crew for the
second carrier. Now, the Liaoning and Shandong will have to train the entire crew for
the third carrier, Fujian.

With a score of aircraft carriers and air wings in its fleet for decades, the U.S. Navy has
a deep bench of experienced active-duty personnel from which to draw should it need
to create a new aircraft carrier crew. The PLAN is generating experience in carrier
aviation—pilots, anticorrosion procedures, flight deck crews, and firefighting
protocols—from nothing. In many cases, senior PLAN officers and noncommissioned
officers are learning hard lessons at the same time as their junior sailors. The PLA
faces the same personnel limitations fielding other technical weapon systems that they
are often operating in unfamiliar areas under complicated conditions. The PLA simply
cannot scale up its human resources fast enough to meet its emerging operational
requirements. That said, the PLA is making cautious progress. The Chinese military
recently began a series of personnel reforms, what it calls “talent work,” to address its
recognized shortfalls in recruiting, training, and retention.18

As PLAN operational capacities improve and it operates farther from home waters,
China will create additional challenges for the United States and its allies. In a potential
conflict, U.S. forces will face more sophisticated and complex threats from new vectors
as the PLA tries to outflank the U.S. Navy’s distributed maritime operations strategy
and the U.S. joint force’s efforts at “expanded maneuver.” Of course, geometry cuts

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both ways. The PLAN must also be concerned about surviving a coordinated, multiaxis
attack. The question may be whether the advantages gained and the risks realized by
the changing geometry of these new operating areas drive one side to shoot first in a
crisis to retain its advantage.

In the “competition phase” below the level of armed conflict, the changing geometry of
PLAN operations will also create new challenges and risks. Chinese forces operating
close to other naval forces in unfamiliar areas should be cause for concern. Some
Chinese media noted that the Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group was operating in
the Philippine Sea during the Liaoning’s May 2022 deployment.19 Neither side has
commented on whether U.S. and PLAN forces operated near each other. But a close
encounter is inevitable. There should be great concern that the channels of
communication both navies enjoyed ten years ago have largely broken down. The
potential for miscommunication is significant and may well get worse.

It is doubtful the PLAN is actively seeking conflict with the United States or its allies.
But the PLAN will continue to push the envelope, needling the United States, pushing
to the point of confrontation without crossing the line to war. This is a dangerous game.
Inexperienced PLA personnel operating in unfamiliar areas could push too far; it is
unknown how the U.S. Navy will respond if they do. U.S. Navy leaders and operators
should pay close attention to the changing geometry of PLAN operations as the tactical
proficiency of its personnel continues to improve.

December 2022 Update

Just as the January 2023 Proceedings and the above article went to print, the PLAN
aircraft carrier Liaoning returned to the Philippine Sea for another training deployment.
The carrier transited the Miyako Strait on 16 December 2022 accompanied by two
Type 055 Renhai cruisers, one Type 052C Luyang II destroyer, one Type 054A Jiankai
II frigate, and a Type 901 Fuyu supply ship. The strike group returned to Chinese
waters on 1 January 2023.

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The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) reported that the substance of the
December 2022 training appeared very similar to what was observed in December
2021 and May 2022.1 Interestingly, the Philippine Sea carrier training occurred
concurrently with a joint China-Russia navy exercise in the East China Sea. Compared
to May 2022, the most notable difference in the December 2022 deployment was the
range at which the Chinese carrier conducted flight operations. The Liaoning pushed
deep into the eastern Philippine Sea. On 23 December, the ship reportedly conducted
fixed-wing flight operations 400 nautical miles (nm) from U.S. bases on Guam. These
operations truly were “blue water operations”—more than 1,300 nm from the Chinese
mainland. PLAN J-15 fighters had no prospects for divert airfields in U.S. Mariana
Islands territories or U.S. military protectorates Palau or Yap, just south of the carrier’s
operating area.2

Over 15 days, the PLAN carrier reportedly conducted as many as thirte13en days of
flight operations in the Philippine Sea. JMSDF reporting indicates that
the Liaoning conducted about 20 fighter sorties per fly-day, which is consistent with the
earlier Philippine Sea training deployments. J-15s again appeared to fly “clean” or with
relatively light air-to-air missiles. No flight operations were reported by JMSDF over the

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Christmas weekend, 24–25 December, when the Liaoning was farthest from China
and closest to Guam.

The Liaoning’s December 2022 deployment will likely be heralded in Chinese media
as more evidence of the PLAN’s “combat capability.” Operating a PLAN carrier group
just west of Guam was certainly a noteworthy evolution in the geometry of PLAN carrier
operations. Still, at those ranges, the Chinese carrier was objectively at a significant
disadvantage. The Liaoning’s small air wing could generate only a modest number of
sorties with limited airborne radar support from its organic Z-18 airborne early warning
helicopter. In a conflict, the Chinese carrier and its escorts would arguably face
overwhelming risk from U.S. air power on Guam and from the Nimitz Carrier Strike
Group, which was reportedly operating in the Philippine Sea at the time. However,
what the PLAN may lack in proficiency, it apparently makes up for by scheduling
significant training evolutions on holiday weekends, generating consternation for
watchstanders and alert crews and upsetting Christmas and New Year’s “holiday
routines.”

1. All PLAN activity and ship positions taken from Japanese Joint Staff, “Movement of
Chinese Navy Fleet” press releases, 16–28 December 2022.

2. Palau and Yap were 350 nm and 200 nm south of the Liaoning 24 Dececemberop
area respectively. Under the terms of a Compact of Free Association with the U.S.,
foreign militaries are not allowed to use facilities on Palau or in the Federated States
of Micronesia, which includes Yap.

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1) "China´s demonstrated intent to operate at long ranges from the Chinese coast.
" According to the text, how can that affect the Pacific region?

2) What parallel can be drawn between the type 002 Shandong and the Kuznetsov
carrier ?

3) What does ADIZ stand for? What is its purpose?

4) Over the next decade, what will be the centerpiece of PLAN strategy?

5) Name the PLAN ships that accompanied the Lioning on it MAy 2022 deployment to
the Philippine sea? Did any Chinese submarine accompany the formation?

6) " China´s Navy is evolving at an astonishing rate." What facts mention in the text
are likely to support such statement?

7) Fill in the blanks using the following words: purportedly, score, shortfall, sorties,
burgeoning

a) The nuclear bombs were _____________ dropped to shorten the war.

b) A ___________ of countries may be producing chemical weapons.

c) A series of ___________ were carried out at night by a specially equipped


aircraft.

d) Our company's business is _____________ now.

8) What challenges do PLAN pose to the US and its allies as operation capabilities
improve and it operates further than home waters?

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9) By reading the text, one may conclude that:
a) President Xi Jinping believes that US army will always be innovative and ahead
PLA;
b) The world does not acknowledge the growth of the PLA;
c) Japan is no longer an ally of the US;
d) President Xi Jinping has been pressuring the military to fight and win wars;
e) None of the above.

10) Why will an encounter between US and PLAN forces be inevitable?

11) How does the number of sorties from the USS carrier Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) compare to the one
accomplished by the Lioning?

12) What is the advantage for the Chinese carrier to receive the support from land-based PLA airborne
radar and maritime patrol aircraft with regards to the critical geometries of modern naval
operations?

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