INTRODUCTION
A steady development of Internet writing on the all platform Western sea surveillance system SeaWeb (often referred to on Sub Matters) is becoming more specific.
A steady development of Internet writing on the all platform Western sea surveillance system SeaWeb (often referred to on Sub Matters) is becoming more specific.
Two Australian Professors, Desmond Ball at the Australian
National University and Richard Tanter at Melbourne University, produced a major book on how China’s naval forces are surrounded by undersea sensors. The book is The Tools of
Owatatsumi (free Download from ANU Press) of January 2015. Using data from the book Hamish McDonald on April 18, 2015 published an excellent essay "Japan and US enclose Chinese coast within sensor net"
Readers
may recall Submarine Matters’ How to Trap the Chinese Dragon – SeaWeb’s Fixed
Undersea Array, September 4, 2015
ARTICLE
In 2016 an increasing level of detail is surfacing on the (possible) undersea sensor array's extension (or pre-existence) northwest of Indonesia in India's Andaman and Nicobar Islands region.
Where all this is going is that Prasun K. Sengupta on his TRISHUL website has reported on discussions at Day 2 of DEFEXPO INDIA 2016 (March 28 -31, 2016) of April 15, 2016 titled. Prasun K. Sengupta's report is excellent (and 7 pages long). So I will brea it into 4 parts over 4 days.
A longer title could also be A SeaWeb (US, Japan, Australia, India) Quadrilateral Developing.
A longer title could also be A SeaWeb (US, Japan, Australia, India) Quadrilateral Developing.
Part 1 - Undersea Webs
[I have highlighted parts and added links where useful]
"A web of strategic projects is now taking firm shape as
India enters into closer multilateral military cooperation relationships with
Japan, Australia and the United States, as well as regional powers like
Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam. Matters began taking on urgency in
late September 2014, after US President Barack Obama and PM Modi have pledged
to intensify cooperation in maritime security. Following this, on March 16,
2015 the defence ministers of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) at the end of the two-day 9th ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting
in Langkawi, Malaysia, collectively stated that they wanted India to play a far
bigger role in both the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) and the South China Sea.
In the near future, therefore, under the auspices of the
US–India Defence Framework Agreement, foundational pacts like the Logistics
Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA), Communication Interoperability and
Security Memorandum Agreement (CISMOA), and Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement for Geo-Spatial Cooperation (BECA) [see explanation of BECA and other acronyms], are likely to be inked by the two
countries later this year.
Concurrently, Japan can be expected to extend funding
from the Japan International Cooperation Agency for the upgradation of naval
air bases and construction of new ELINT/SIGINT stations along the Andaman and
Nicobar chain of islands, which is made up of 572 islands (of which only 34 are
presently inhabited), stretching around 470 miles north to south.
But most importantly, preliminary planning has commenced
on a Japan-financed project that calls for
1) laying of an undersea optical fibre cable from Chennai
to Port Blair; and
2) the construction of an undersea network of
seabed-based surveillance sensors stretching from the tip of Sumatra right up
to Indira Point. Once completed, this network will be an integral part of the
existing US-Japan ‘Fish Hook’ sound surveillance (SOSUS) network [See The Tools of Owatatsumi (ANU Press, January 2015) Map 4, Page 54] that will play
a pivotal role in constantly monitoring all submarine patrols mounted by
China’s PLA Navy (PLAN) in both the South China Sea and the IOR.
(Courtesy India Defense News)
This network
will in turn be networked with the Indian Navy’s (IN) high-bandwidth National
Command Control and Communications Intelligence network (NC3I) [above], which has been
set up under the IN’s National Maritime Domain Awareness (NMDA) project at a
cost of Rs.1,003 crores [US$150 million]. At the heart of the NC3I is the Gurgaon-based, Rs.453
crore Information Management and Analysis Centre (IMAC), whose systems
integration software packages were supplied by Raytheon and CISCO.
Oblique references to all these developments were made in
the joint statement that was issued last month after the visiting US Secretary
of Defense Ashton Carter held delegation-level talks with his Indian
counterpart Manohar Parrikar. The joint statement spoke about: A) new
opportunities to deepen cooperation in maritime security and maritime domain
awareness; B) commencement of navy-to-navy discussions on submarine safety and
anti-submarine warfare; and
3) enhancing on-going navy-to-navy discussions to cover
submarine-related issues.
The US-Japan "Fish Hook" SOSUS network. Map featured in the Ball and Tanter book The Tools of Owatatsumi (ANU Press, January 2015) Map 4, Page 54.
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US-Japan Fish Hook
SOSUS network [Map above]
The US was always interested in Japanese and Indian
locations for its SOSUS stations. Initially called Project Caesar, this involved
running cables out on continental shelves and connecting them to hydrophones
suspended above the sea bottom at optimum signal depths.
An ‘experimental station’ was established at the
north-western tip of Hokkaido in 1957, with the cable extending into the Soya
(La Perouse) Strait. It monitored all Soviet submarine traffic going in and out
of Vladivostok and Nakhodka in the Sea of Japan.Undersea surveillance systems
and associated shore-based data collection stations code-named Barrier and
Bronco were installed in Japan in the 1960s. Acoustic data collected at these
sites was transmitted by US defence communications satellites to US Navy (USN)
processing and analysis centres in the US.In the 1970s, a network between
between Japan and the Korean Peninsula was commissioned.
By 1980, three stations at Wakkanai (designated JAP-4),
Tsushima (JAP-108) and the Ryukyu Islands (RYU-80) were operational in Japan,
along with earlier stations built in the Tsushima Straits and the Okinawa area.
The existence of old cables at Horonai Point in north-west Honshu, which during
the Cold War led out to SOSUS arrays in the Sea of Japan, has been widely
described by scuba divers. By the mid-1980s the SOSUS hydrophone arrays
stretched from southern Japan to The Philippines, covering the approaches to
China.
After the collapse of the USSR and the decline of the submarine threat to
the US in the early 1990s, the USN allowed its SOSUS systems in the north-west
Pacific to atrophy, although some arrays were retained in working order so as
to support civilian scientific research (such as tracking whales and monitoring
undersea volcanic activity). According to a USN directive issued in August
1994, all seabed-based fixed-arrays in the Pacific were placed on ‘hot
standby’; personnel would ‘not be routinely assigned to monitor fixed-array
data’ unless that data was required for operational purposes, but in practice
the probability of being able to reconstitute them to full operational status
was ‘extremely low’."
Part 2 is tomorrow
Pete
1 comment:
An interesting development indicating that multiple nations are going to install a SOSUS type array around the area in which Chinese Subs could pose a threat. I haven't seen that in any of the dDefense Blogs, or just missed it.
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