-Caveat Lector-

>  http://www.scientificamerican.com/2001/0501issue/0501ashley.html
>
> >From the F-8 net...
>
> This is what our EP-3 crew was watching...
>
> Russian 'Rocket' Torpedo Arms Chinese Subs
> Charles R. Smith Tuesday, April 24, 2001
> sum:
> The Chinese navy is arming itself with a deadly combination of silent
> submarines, supersonic nuclear tipped Stealth missiles, and Shkval rocket
> torpedoes. end sum
>
> Russia has developed new submarine-launched torpedoes that travel at
> incredible speeds? Perhaps as fast as the speed of sound underwater.
>
> Scientific American reports in its May edition that these super
> sophisticated weapons have been linked to the sinking of the Russian
> submarine Kursk  last August, and even to the arrest and imprisonment of
> Edmond Pope. Pope, an  American businessman, was charged by Russian
> authorities with spying,  specifically that he had sought to buy plans for
> the "ultrahigh-speed torpedo." The magazine reports that "evidence does
> suggest that both incidents revolved around an amazing and little-reported
> technology that  allows naval weapons and vessels to travel submerged at
> hundreds of miles per  hour? in some cases, faster than the speed of sound
> in water.  The swiftest traditional undersea technologies, in contrast,
are
> limited to a maximum of  about 80 mph."
>
> The new technology that allows for these incredible speeds is "is based on
> the physical phenomenon of super cavitation."
>
> According to Scientific American, the new generation of torpedoes, some
> believed capable of carrying nuclear warheads, are surrounded by a
> "renewable envelope of gas so that the liquid wets very little of the
> body's surface, thereby drastically reducing the viscous drag" on the
> torpedo. The new technology "could mean a quantum leap in naval warfare
that
> is analogous in some ways to the move from prop planes to jets or even to
> rockets and missiles." In 1997 Russia announced that it had developed a
> high-speed unguided underwater torpedo, which has no equivalent in the
West.
> Code-named the Shkval or "Squall," the Russian torpedo reportedly travels
so
> fast that no U.S. defense can stop it.
>
> In late 2000, after the sinking of the Russian submarine Kursk, new
reports
> began circulating that the Chinese navy had bought the Shkval torpedo. The
> modern Russian weapon in Chinese navy hands has sent alarm bells ringing
> through the halls of the Pentagon. "China purchased the Shkval rocket
> torpedo," stated Richard Fisher, a defense analyst and senior fellow at
the
> Jamestown Foundation.
>
> "The Shkval was designed to give Soviet subs with less capable sonar the
> ability to kill U.S. submarines before U.S. wire-guided anti-sub torpedoes
> could reach their target. The Chinese navy would certainly  want to have
> this kind of advantage over U.S. subs in the future. At the speed that it
> travels, the Shkval could literally punch a hole in most U.S. ships, with
> little need for an explosive warhead." "This torpedo travels at a speed of
> 200 knots, or five to six times the speed of a normal torpedo, and is
> specially suited for attacking large ships such as aircraft carriers,"
> stated Fisher. The report that China purchased some 40 Shkval torpedoes
from
> Russia in 1998 has been confirmed by U.S. intelligence sources.
>
> Pentagon  officials also confirmed that a Chinese naval officer was on
board
> the ill-fated Russian submarine Kursk to observe firings of the Shkval.
The
> Shkval rocket first came to light in the Western press in April 2000 when
> Russian FSB security services charged American businessman Edward Pope
with
> spying for the U.S.   According to Russian intelligence sources, Pope
> obtained detailed information on the rocket-powered torpedo. A FSB
statement
> said it confiscated "technical drawings of various equipment, recordings
of
> his conversations with Russian citizens relating to their work in the
> Russian defense industry, and receipts for American dollars received by
> them."
>
> The 6,000-pound Shkval rocket torpedo has a range of about 7,500 yards and
> can fly through the water at more than 230 miles an hour. The
> solid-rocket-propelled "torpedo" achieves this high speed by producing a
> high-pressure stream of bubbles from its nose and skin, which coats the
> weapon in a thin layer of gas. The Shkval flies underwater inside a giant
> "envelope" of gas bubbles in a process called "super cavitation."
>
> The Russian Pacific Fleet held the first tests of the Shkval torpedo in
the
> spring of 1998. In early 1999, Russia began marketing a conventionally
armed
> version of the Shkval high-speed underwater rocket at the IDEX 99
exhibition
> in Abu Dhabi. The Shkval is so fast that it is guided by an autopilot
rather
> than by a homing head as on most torpedoes. The original Shkval was
designed
> to carry a tactical nuclear warhead detonated by a simple timer clock.
>
> However, the Russians recently began advertising a homing version, which
> runs out at very high speed, then slows to search for its target. There
are
> no evident countermeasures to the Shkval and, according to weapons
experts,
> its deployment by Russian and Chinese naval forces has placed the U.S.
Navy
> at a considerable disadvantage. "We have no equivalent, its velocity would
> make evasive action exceedingly difficult, and it is likely that we have
no
> defense against it," stated Jack Spencer, a defense analyst at the
Heritage
> Foundation.
>
> According to the Jamestown Foundation's Richard Fisher, China is acquiring
a
> fleet of blue-water submarines armed with the deadly Shkval. In a recent
> defense report, Fisher noted the Chinese navy is arming itself with a
deadly
> combination of silent submarines, supersonic nuclear tipped Stealth
missiles
> and Shkval rocket torpedoes. Fisher warned that the new Chinese navy is
> capable of operating far from Asian shores. "There are reports that the
> Chinese navy's current subs do not have tubes large enough to fire the
> Shkval. The Chinese navy has completed the acquisition of four Russian
> Kilo-class conventional submarines.
>
> The Kilo 636 is said to be nearly as quiet as the early version of the
U.S.
> Los Angeles class nuclear submarine," noted Fisher. "This very high speed
> torpedo would provide the PLA with the technology to build their own
> version, and this is a looming threat," stated Fisher. "The next few years
> may also see China produce a new class of nuclear-powered submarine, the
> Type 093.
>
> Again benefiting from Russian technology." The Chinese Type 093-class
> nuclear attack submarines are similar to Russian Victor III class first
> produced at the Leningrad yards in the 1970s. Each Chinese Type 093 weighs
> more than 5,000 tons and is over a football field in length. The Chinese
> type 093 submarines are armed with eight 21-inch torpedo tubes that are
> large enough to fire the super-fast Shkval. "The Type 093 is projected by
> the U.S. Office of Naval Intelligence to have a performance similar to the
> Russian Victor-III  nuclear attack submarine. By one estimate, four to six
> type 093s should enter service by 2012," concluded Fisher. -30-
>
>

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