Yes, China Is Practicing Air and Amphibious Assaults

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August 6, 2020 Topic: Security Region: Asia Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: Z-10HelicopterAmphibious Assault ShipChinaPLANPLAAFTaiwan

Yes, China Is Practicing Air and Amphibious Assaults

Taiwan needs to keep its guard up.

 

The Chinese military is demonstrating the ability to conduct multi-domain amphibious attack operations for a “potential military operation on the island of Taiwan,” by landing Z-10 helicopters on amphibious assault ships. 

A report in the Chinese government-backed Global Times specifically cites analysts referring to a possible attack on Taiwan.

 

“The combination of Army helicopters and Navy warships can significantly boost the PLA’s amphibious, vertical landing capability and will play a vital role in potential military operations on the island of Taiwan,” the report says.

The exercise was described as a “sea-crossing assault” drill intended to prepare the People’s Liberation Army for new tactical amphibious assault capabilities. The helicopters took off from a land base, according to the paper, before landing on the flight deck of a Chinese Type 071 amphibious assault ship. 

The report says the Z-10s bring attack options and fire support that China’s Navy Aviation Forces does not have. 

The PLA Army attack helicopters can also provide low-altitude air cover for advancing amphibious forces by providing covering fire and forward reconnaissance for approaching ship-to-shore forces. In addition, the Z-10s increase the number of helicopter assets potentially available for amphibious attacks. 

If several ship-based helicopters are in flight, new aircraft arriving from land can descend onto the amphibious assault ship, refuel and rearm before rejoining the attack mission. 

Cross-domain operations massively escalate the potential scale of an amphibious attack. Should Z-10s land on the deck of an amphibious assault ship, it would indeed massively increase the kinds of air-attacks potentially available during a Chinese invasion of Taiwan

Interestingly, the assault drills included what the U.S. Army calls air assault, something often performed by Army Rangers. 

“On arriving at the designated areas, the soldiers aboard the helicopters rappelled down the helicopters and initiated the attack,” the report says. 

The U.S. military has been practicing these kinds of cross-domain maneuvers for many years already, and it would be accurate to say that the United States may be well ahead of these kinds of maneuvers demonstrated by China. 

 

Existing U.S. multi-domain strategy has already involved numerous Army-Navy task forces in the Pacific aimed at refining cross-domain attacks, and the services have begun to explore a variety of new inter-service combat tactics. In fact, U.S. Army helicopters have operated from Navy ships on many occasions. 

For example, Army weapons developers have explained that there is no reason land-based rockets or artillery could not be used to attack enemy surface ships. It is also conceivable that previously land-based weapons, such as rockets, guns or missiles, could be integrated to fire from the deck of Navy ships. 

Despite the apparent success of this exercise, it seems clear that the true merits of multi-domain operations may likely reside in advanced networking. This is a huge focus for the Pentagon, which is now advancing Joint Multi-Domain Command and Control initiatives. 

The idea is to enable air, surface, undersea and land platforms to share information in real-time, a technical capability designed to optimize attack options available to commanders. Integrated intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR), it could be said, offers the true margin of difference regarding the application of cross-domain operations, particularly with respect to amphibious assault. 

For instance, missile defense detection can instantly be linked with ground-based interceptors and surface ships can better attack land targets. Moreover, airborne stealth fighter jets can network targeting data with Navy ships and Army ground forces. 

Whether Chinese forces can approach this kind of networking so far remains unclear. However, the relevance of the assault drills, it seems, hinges upon the extent to which land-launched attack helicopters can receive and execute targeting information from air and surface assets. The circumstance invites many questions, such as whether Chinese Z-10s can control unmanned systems from the cockpit in a manner similar to what the U.S. Army can do

Kris Osborn is defense editor for the National Interest. Osborn previously served at the Pentagon as a Highly Qualified Expert with the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army—Acquisition, Logistics & Technology. Osborn has also worked as an anchor and on-air military specialist at national TV networks. He has appeared as a guest military expert on Fox News, MSNBC, The Military Channel, and The History Channel. He also has a Masters Degree in Comparative Literature from Columbia University.

Image: Reuters