distances
Well, the distance from Los Angeles, California to Manila, Philippines is 7,295 miles
http://www.angelfire.com/md2/timewarp/cursortrail.html ;
and from LA to Hanoi is 6,643 Nautical Miles. http://www.theairdb.com/connection/HAN-LAX.html
Distance from Hong Kong (which isn't that far from Hainan- 467 n.miles to Hanoi, about halfway or approx 232.5 mi.) to Los Angeles:
6,298 nautical miles, so Hainan to LA is about 6,298 + 232.5= 6,530.5 miles.
http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/distanceresult.html?p1=102&p2=137
Airplanes use great circle routes just like ICBMs. So, a boomer on Hainan and in the S.China Sea, i.e. somewhere between Manila & Hanoi, armed with 11K mi range SLBMs that you mentioned earlier can easily target LA, not to mention NW USA. Yes, if launched from at or near Hainan the missiles may/will fly close to Taiwan & Japan, but not if launched from the middle of the S.China Sea. During the Cold War, the NATO navies were able to track less than 1/4 of all Soviet Northern Fleet SSBNs, as noisy as they were. The Chinese, without a doubt, will be improving on quieting of their subs- the USN Ohio class use open, deep water ocean to hide- I don't see why can't PLAN do the same in the future, in NW Pacific, W/S. Pacific or the Atlantic & Indian Oceans? As I said before, from the S.China Sea a boomer/SSGN can easily sneak in either direction. In the meantime, going to the Kurils during piecetime will give potential adversaries plenty of opportunity to track them, record their noises & routines. Also, communicating with a sub across the Sea of Japan and in the Russian's backyard would be not as reliable as in the S.China Sea.
SSBNs are mainly to provide the 2nd strike capability. The Bohai Bay, Yellow & East China Seas are shallow and small, and they'll be nuked in the 1st strike to kill any boomers that might be there. S.China Sea is more than twice as big & dip.
There is a possibility of miscalculation on Russia's and/or US part regarding ICBMs in NE China- and why depend on Russia's good will that may change in the future? The ABM systems in Korea, Taiwan & Japan may be upgraded later to deal with IC/SLBMs, and the ABL now being tested may also be based on Guam, HI, and Okinawa as part of TBMD/NMD, once it matures. Besides, even if they can't shoot down IC/SLBMs now, the radars will be able to track them and give valuable data to NMD network downrange.
Well, the distance from Los Angeles, California to Manila, Philippines is 7,295 miles
http://www.angelfire.com/md2/timewarp/cursortrail.html ;
and from LA to Hanoi is 6,643 Nautical Miles. http://www.theairdb.com/connection/HAN-LAX.html
Distance from Hong Kong (which isn't that far from Hainan- 467 n.miles to Hanoi, about halfway or approx 232.5 mi.) to Los Angeles:
6,298 nautical miles, so Hainan to LA is about 6,298 + 232.5= 6,530.5 miles.
http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/distanceresult.html?p1=102&p2=137
Airplanes use great circle routes just like ICBMs. So, a boomer on Hainan and in the S.China Sea, i.e. somewhere between Manila & Hanoi, armed with 11K mi range SLBMs that you mentioned earlier can easily target LA, not to mention NW USA. Yes, if launched from at or near Hainan the missiles may/will fly close to Taiwan & Japan, but not if launched from the middle of the S.China Sea. During the Cold War, the NATO navies were able to track less than 1/4 of all Soviet Northern Fleet SSBNs, as noisy as they were. The Chinese, without a doubt, will be improving on quieting of their subs- the USN Ohio class use open, deep water ocean to hide- I don't see why can't PLAN do the same in the future, in NW Pacific, W/S. Pacific or the Atlantic & Indian Oceans? As I said before, from the S.China Sea a boomer/SSGN can easily sneak in either direction. In the meantime, going to the Kurils during piecetime will give potential adversaries plenty of opportunity to track them, record their noises & routines. Also, communicating with a sub across the Sea of Japan and in the Russian's backyard would be not as reliable as in the S.China Sea.
SSBNs are mainly to provide the 2nd strike capability. The Bohai Bay, Yellow & East China Seas are shallow and small, and they'll be nuked in the 1st strike to kill any boomers that might be there. S.China Sea is more than twice as big & dip.
They just could try to get their permission to use the Sea of Okhotsk as a submarine bastion- better than open ocean off the Kurils, and closer to CONUS! I very much doubt the Russians will give them green light to do that!Will the Russians be alarmed if the missiles fly over their area? Certainly but they could see from the trajectories they are not the targets. This is not to mention this can also be cleared or declared to the Russians before hand. Trajectories reaching over Japan or Korea isn't an issue to base boomers in the south China seas because ABM systems generally intercept in the terminal or reentry phase, not in the initial rising phase.
There is a possibility of miscalculation on Russia's and/or US part regarding ICBMs in NE China- and why depend on Russia's good will that may change in the future? The ABM systems in Korea, Taiwan & Japan may be upgraded later to deal with IC/SLBMs, and the ABL now being tested may also be based on Guam, HI, and Okinawa as part of TBMD/NMD, once it matures. Besides, even if they can't shoot down IC/SLBMs now, the radars will be able to track them and give valuable data to NMD network downrange.
Sorry, I tried but couldn't access Sinodef. forum to view that picture.Gates' visit also comes on the heels of a successful ballistic missile test earlier this week above the Pacific Ocean that included the participation of the Japanese Navy. The U.S. military shot down two missiles at once, while a Japanese Navy Aegis-equipped ship, the Kongo, tracked the missile targets. The Aegis is an integrated radar and missile defense system.
The Kongo also simulated firing its own interceptors in preparation for another test off Hawaii next month in which it will attempt to intercept a missile itself. If successful, the event would mark the first time Japan has ever intercepted a ballistic missile.
Tokyo has poured money into missile defense in the decade since North Korea unexpectedly test-fired a long-range missile over northern Japan in 1998.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2007-11-08-gates-japan_N.htm
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