Som du kan lese uthevet med gult. gjorde svenskene omtrent rent bord da de fikk "skutt" alle sine torpedoer mot en såkalt strike group ledet av hangarskipet USS Ronald Reagan i 2005. US Navy leide in Gotland for nye 12 mndr. Nå gjentas eksperimentet. (Red.)
Chilean Navy Diesel-Electric Attack Submarine Appears In San Diego (Updated)
Working with foreign diesel-electric submarines provides valuable training to the US Navy, which only operates nuclear-powered types.
JOSEPH TREVITHICK View Joseph Trevithick's Articles
Apublicly accessible
webcam shows what appears to be a Chilean Navy Scorpene class submarine
sailing into the Port of San Diego in southern California earlier today. Though
we don't know for sure what the purpose of its visit is, the U.S. Navy's
Pacific Fleet has engaged with Latin American navies in the past as part of a program
that offers valuable opportunities to work with, and train against, advanced
diesel-electric submarines. Since 1990, the U.S. Navy has only operated
nuclear-powered submarines.
The submarine first
appeared on the feed from San Diego Web Cam at around 3:30 PM
local time. At multiple points in the stream, the Chilean national flag is seen
flying atop the boat's sail. At present, the Chilean Navy operates two
Franco-Spanish Scorpene class submarines and a
pair of German-made Type 209/1400-Ls, known in the country as
the Thomson class. The Scorpenes are easy to separate
from the Thomsons, with the former type
having dive planes on the sail, while the latter does not.
SAN
DIEGO WEB CAM CAPTURE
The Chilean Scorpenes, the first of which,
the O'Higgins, entered service in 2005,
are fairly modern diesel-electric attack submarines. Among other things,
they feature
air-independent propulsion (AIP) systems, which allow them to dive for
days at a time while remaining very quiet and, and as a result, difficult to
detect and track. AIP-equipped diesel submarines are now proliferating around
the globe and are considered major threat. Each one of the Scorpene class has six
torpedo tubes that can be used to fire Black Shark
heavyweight torpedoes or Exocet anti-ship cruise missiles.
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The reason for this
submarine's visit to San Diego is unclear and we have already reached out to
U.S. Third Fleet, which is headquartered there, for more information. In 2001,
the U.S. Navy did begin working with boats from various Latin American nations
as part of the Diesel-Electric
Submarine Initiative (DESI), a combined training program that
units on the West and East Coasts take part in. Ostensibly, these combined
training events are meant to give all of the participants opportunities to
practice various core skills sets relating to submarine and anti-submarine
warfare (ASW) operations, as well as help broaden ties, in general, between the
U.S. military and its partners in the Southern Hemisphere.
The Chilean Navy's Scorpene class
submarine Carrera.
However, since the U.S.
Navy does not have any diesel-electric boats of its own, DESI has also provided
particularly valuable opportunities over the years for it to train against
these kinds of submarines, which have distinct operational characteristics and
signatures from nuclear-powered ones. "During these visits, we are able to
simulate a variety of wartime scenarios against diesel submarines which adds an
additional degree of difficulty and reality to fleet ASW, as diesel submarines
have proven to be quiet and elusive," Navy Lieutenant Alexander Papadakos,
a member of Submarine Squadron 11, said during a DESI
engagement with the Chilean Navy's Thomson class
submarine Simpson, in 2018.
DOD
The Chilean Navy's Thomson class
submarine Simpson.
The U.S. Navy has sought
out these kinds of opportunities in different ways since 1990, when it
decommissioned the Barbel class attack submarine
USS Blueback, its last diesel-electric
submarine. Blueback, one of just three
Barbels the Navy acquired, had served for a time at the end of its career as an aggressor due to its unique
characteristics among the rest of the service's submarine fleet.
In the mid-2000s, the Navy
then leased Sweden’s AIP-equipped HSwMS Gotland to serve as a
diesel-electric aggressor. That period highlighted the value of being able to
train against these kinds of submarines, with Gotland famously managing to
sneak right into the middle of an aircraft carrier strike groups during
exercises, as well as scoring simulated kills against various surface ships and
other submarines during training engagements.
The Navy has also acquired
at least two large-scale
training targets designed to mimic diesel-electric submarines
in the past two decades.
More recently, in 2019,
the service stood up a new dedicated submarine aggressor squadron, or AGGRON, to help in training
submarine and anti-submarine forces. However, as it exists now, this unit's
primary job is schooling Navy personnel in enemy tactics, techniques, and
procedures, and helping submarines acting as the "opposing force," or
OPFOR, to better represent potential threats. At least as of last year, it has
no submarines permanently assigned to it and the Navy still has no plans to
acquire its own diesel-electric types, which could add greater realism to
exercises.
In the meantime, combined training programs, such
as DESI, remain the most readily available ways for Navy submarine and
anti-submarine forces to train against these threats.
So, while we don't know why exactly this
Chilean Scorpene class boat is in San
Diego, it is very likely there to, at least in part, provide very useful
training for Navy personnel against a type of submarine they might not
otherwise encounter on a routine basis during training.
UPDATE: 7/2/2021 —
The Chilean Navy has now officially confirmed the
arrival of one of its Scorpene class submarines at
Naval Base Point Loma in San Diego. A Spanish-language Tweet from that service
simply says that it is there "to participate in an international operation
with the @USNavy."
However, after our initial
story was published, a reader also alerted us to a story in the
Spanish-language defense and security
magazine Infodefensa that said the
Chilean Navy's Scorpene class
submarine O'Higgins had left that
service's base in Talcahuano in early June and that it was heading to the
United States for exercises over the next five months.
"For more than five months it [the O'Higgins] will be deployed to
operate with the most modern Navy in the world and even carry out submarine
rescue operations," Rear Admiral Juan Pablo Zúñiga Alvayay, the head of
the Chilean Navy's submarine force, was quoted as saying that story. "For
this, a crew of more than 40 men, and with an average age of 32 years, will
represent us. We wish them success, a good hunt, and a safe return home."
Infodefensa does not
specifically mention the U.S. Navy's DESI program, but how Rear Admiral Zúñiga
described the nature of the O'Higgins' current deployment,
especially plans to conduct submarine rescue training, is well in line with
previous Chilean Navy participation in that initiative.
"The highlight of the
DESI deployment is CHILEMAR VIII, a submarine search and rescue exercise that
will take place in August," the U.S. Navy news
item regarding the arrival of the Chilean Navy's Thomson class
submarine Simpson in San Diego in 2018
said. "Chile remains the only South American submarine-operating country
to conduct frequent live submarine rescue exercises with U.S. Navy rescue
assets at Undersea Rescue Command."
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