Once Upon a Maritime in the Western Pacific by Jeff Head

Lezt

Junior Member
Jeff,

Whats your direction on the book? Chinese aggression? US aggression? proxy war? ww3? old wounds like, resurgent national sentiment in a unified Korea exacting vengeance on Japan? something like a coup where taiwan declares formal independence, or integration into china or a coup?
 
Having in mind Jeff's earlier statements and visions, I quiet exspect to see Lightning II aircraft leading an airborne task force into action and directing a group of UCAVs into the fight. Doing DEAD stuff, complementing Growlers on a SEAD mission. And all that.
...

Perhaps we can also see the F-22 Raptors stretch their legs and show the new kids, both hostile and friendly, on the block a thing or two even if they are long in the tooth, happens to be a good thing for raptors!
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
Perhaps we can also see the F-22 Raptors stretch their legs and show the new kids, both hostile and friendly, on the block a thing or two even if they are long in the tooth, happens to be a good thing for raptors!
I'd have to opine that the Queen of the skies has maintained her crown, and her girlish good looks, and works out regularly, like the Honey Badger, ya prolly don't wanta mess with her on any level??
 
...

a question: how do you call the fore funnel shaped like this :)
Nagato.jpg

(from what I figured, the Nagato had "that" from mid 1920s to mid 1930s)

after ten days, I got back to my own off-topic question LOL and I believe the answer is "a serpentine shape"
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Okay, here's three posts that are the initial draft fo the prologue:

PROLOGUE

May 24, 05:35 hours local
East China Sea
USS Michael Monsoor, DDG-1001
110 nautical miles North-Northeast of Kuma-shima Island


“Captain on the bridge!”
The officer of the deck and other personnel on the bridge snapped to attention as Captain Henry Stevenson stepped onto the bridge.
It was not that much of surprise.
Throughout this deployment, and in the year and three months since he had taken command, the officers and personnel had discovered through their own experience that he was an early riser, and apt to step onto the bridge at almost any hour of the night or day…or into engineering, or into the Ship’s Mission Center (SMC), or the hanger, or about anywhere on the ship for that matter.
This morning was no exception.
“At ease, folks,” the Captain said.
“Jeremy, what’s the current status?”
Lt. Jeremy Long was this morning’s Officer of the deck, and a Surface Warfare Officer on the Monsoor. He had joined the USS Michael Monsoor five months earlier and been involved in the work up to this deployment, which had started two months earlier. He had been on duty since 2400 hours.
“Sir, all is well at the current time. The Izumo group is 185 nautical miles to the east-northeast of our position. The George Washington and her group are almost 300 miles to our east.
“We have a Triton aircraft circling at 50,000 just off to our north.
“The Jackson and the Billings are on station, 25 nautical miles to our north and northwest respectively, and the Illinois is on station and checked in at 04:45, on schedule.
“We have an HV-22 COD aircraft due in at 07:30 from the Enterprise and she is currently 350 nautical miles to our west with her group.”
Captain Stevenson listened to these reports, considered them briefly, and then asked.
“And what of our Chinese friends?”
Jeremy had known that the Captain was going to ask this question in some form or another whenever he came to the bridge. The captain always expected his duty officers and personnel to have succinct, informative, and accurate information regarding their responsibilities while on duty. When he entered any space, he may or may not ask for it, but Jeremy somehow knew he would ask for it this morning as soon as he had seen him step onto the bridge.
So he had been prepared.
The Monsoor, the Jackson and the Billings, accompanied by the Virginia class nuclear attack submarine, Illinois, comprised Task Force 21, and were deployed to this very area around the Senkaku Islands (or Diaoyu Islands as they were known to the Chinese) specifically to prompt some form of a response from the Chinese and their Navy, the PLAN, and then attempt to gauge it, electronically capture it, and then maintain their presence according to international law.
The problem was that the Japanese and the Chinese both claimed the Islands, and there had been numerous incidents between the Chinese Maritime Services and their Navy, and the Japanese Maritime Self Defense Forces, or JMSDF, over the years.
But things had been ratcheted up to a much higher scale recently.
In a direct response to ever increasing Chinese reclamation efforts in disputed areas of the South China Sea, Japan had recently begun building facilities of its own, including an airfield, on the main Senkaku Island. This was driving much increased tensions in the area and had led to the US Navy deciding, in consultation with the Japanese, who had a large task force in the area centered on their VTOL carrier, Izumo, to conduct this mission.
“Sir, based on real time satellite info, SIGINT we are receiving from the Triton, and upon a P-8 recon patrol from around midnight, we’re tracking a large PLAN surface group approaching from the West-Southwest. That group is centered about 200 nautical miles away and is just coming out of the Taiwan Straits.
“We have also had PLAN aircraft regularly approaching within 15-20 miles of our position for the last four hours…every 30 minutes or so.
“They also have an AEW&C aircraft up, orbiting over the East China Sea about 100 miles due west of us.”
Captain Stevenson interjected…seeking more detail.
“What’s the specifics on the PLAN group?…and what type of aircraft are conducting the recon?”
The fact was, Lt. Long had been about to share that very information and continued without missing a heart-beat.
“We have identified a Type 052D destroyer, one of their older Sovremenny destroyers, two Type 054A frigates, and three Type 056 light frigates, sir, though we do not have the specific pennants at this time.. Seven surface combatants in all.
“Intel did indicate about 3 AM that there is a better than even chance that they also have at least one…maybe two…of their Type 095 SSNs in the vicinity, though the Illinois and both LCS have indicated this morning that they have not picked up anything and we have not heard a peep ourselves.”
Stevenson considered this information.
“Hmm,” he thought to himself, “they have seven vessels altogether. That means at least twenty-eight long range surface to surface missiles on the frigates in that group, eight on the Sov, with probably at least eight more on the VLS tubes of the destroyer…maybe more. We’ll call it a total of 46 to be safe.”
…and what were his own anti-surface capabilities?
“Well,” he thought, “both LCS received their SSC armament upgrades a few years back and carry four NSM anti-surface missiles each. The Monsoor has a battery of sixteen of the new Long Range Anti-Shipping Missiles (LRASMs) in her Peripheral Vertical Launch system (PVLS) cells.”
He knew that he had the Illinois which herself carried six LRASMs in her launchers for this mission.
“That’s total of 30 long range anti-shipping missiles,” he thought, “we’re outgunned.”
“If it comes down to a missile engagement, it could get really ugly…especially for the LCS out front,” thought the Captain.
The Captain also knew that all of the ships in both groups also carried main guns for shore and surface bombardment.
Each LCS had a 57mm main gun. But those small caliber guns had a range of only about nine nautical miles. They were effective against small surface contacts, but their range and impact were very limited against major surface combatants like a destroyer, or a frigate.
Each of the Chinese vessels, on the other hand, carried much larger and longer range weapons. The destroyers had 130mm main guns. Those guns, with some of the Chinese new extended range munitions, were going to be effective out to 30 or 35 nautical miles. The Chinese frigates all carried their advanced 76mm guns, which had a range, with extended munitions, of over 20 nautical miles.
“But a Zumwalt destroyer carries something special,” the Captain thought. “Weapons that will make a significant difference in any naval gun fire engagement.”
The USS Michael Monsoor, DDG-1001, was one of six Zumwalt class destroyers in the US Navy inventory. She had one Advanced Gun System (AGM), which was a 155mm main gun that shot extended range munitions, capable of precision guidance out to 80 nautical miles.
When launched, the Monsoor had two of these 155mm AGMs. But five years earlier, the Monsoor became the sixth US Navy combat ship (behind the other Zumwalts) to receive a new, 155mm “rail gun”.
The rail gun operated off of the ships large electrical capacity and used electrical energy to fire a 155mm projectile. No gun powder was involved. The rail gun accelerated its projectile up to a hyper-velocity muzzle exit speed…near Mach 6. This allowed those precision guided munitions to be affective out to 125 nautical miles. And she could fire those projectiles at a rate of over 30 per minute if necessary. If it came down to a naval gun fire engagement, the US Navy group was going to have a decided advantage.
“Let’s pray to God that it does not come down to that,” thought the Captain.
It took Captain Stevenson all of 10 seconds or so to assess all of this in his mind. At that point, he broke what had seemed like a pregnant pause to the Lt.
“…and the aircraft?”
Jeremy was prepared…although the pause had caused him a bit of consternation.
“Sir, they are alternating between flybys with Be-220 Maritime Patrol aircraft, followed a half hour later by two of their J-11BH fighters.
“The MPA is conducting radar sweeps, but the fighters are not going active at all and have not painted us…but they have not tried to hide their presence either.”
“Very well, Jeremy. Good report.
“Have air ops be on their toes. They could be sensitizing us to those regular flybys in an effort to sneak something in closer.
“Contact Commander Lee on the Billings, and Commander Boswell on the Jacskon. Let them know that I will video conference with them at 06:30 on the data link.
“Call me at 06:20 before that meeting.
“Good job folks…carry on.”
(Copyright 2015 Jeff Head)
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Ten minutes later
May 24, 05:45 hours local
East China Sea
PLAN Yinchuan, DDG-175
200 nautical miles West-southwest of the Michael Monsoor


Admiral Zhao Benyi sat in his stateroom and contemplated the situation that was developing around the Diayou Islands.
He knew that the Americans had a Task Group north of the islands. The reports he had been getting over the data link from East Sea Fleet headquarters, from the satellite, from the reconnaissance flights, and the information from the AEW&C were all available to him wherever he went on the ship.
“So, a Zumwalt and two LCS,” he thought to himself.
“That’s a fairly light grouping…but that large Japanese group off to their northeast is bound to be supporting them,” he thought.
The Admiral’s orders were specific. He took them out and read them again:

--- FLASH: EYES ONLY CMDR TF 142.3 ---
1. Intercept US Navy task force currently north of Diayou Islands.
2. Maintain separation of no less than 2 kilometers.
3. Contact on-scene U.S. Navy commander. Warn him away from PRC Economic Zone.
4. Present a 24 hour time table to move at least 200 kilometer distance from Diayou Islands.
5. Do not…repeat…do not engage in harassment, or hostile maneuvers.
6. Inform ESF Command of progress…time of intercept and time of contact.
7. Await further instructions.


“I wonder how the American commander is going to react to this,” he thought.
“He no doubt is considering that this force may intercept him…he is seeing my progress towards him now as surely as I am seeing his own movement.
“But how will he and his superiors react to such an ultimatum?” he wondered.
“More importantly,” he asked himself, “what will my orders be should the Americans refuse to comply with the 200 km zone?
“And what if they bring up the Izumo group and their Carrier Strike Group 5?” he asked himself.
The Admiral, who had been assigned specifically to command this Task Force and was using the Yinchuan as his Task Force command vessel, counted up the assets that he had.
The Yinchuan was a large, very modern multi-purpose destroyer with 64 VLS cells which were multi-purpose and able to launch anti-air missiles, land attack missiles, anti-ship missiles, and anti-submarine rockets. His load-out included 12 long range anti-ship missiles, eight antisubmarine rockets, and 48 long range anti-air missiles.
He had two Type 054A Frigates. They were stationed ten kilometers to either side of his axis of advance and 5 kilometers ahead of the Yinchuan. Each of those vessels carried 32 anti-air missiles in their own VLS cells, and each had eight long range anti-shipping missiles in canister launchers.
Arranged in a crescent to his forward, he had three Type 056 light frigates. They were fifteen kilometers ahead of the main body. They each carried an eight round, close in anti-air missile launcher and also carried four of the same anti-shipping missiles that the larger frigates carried. All three were the “B” variant of the Type 056 and specialized in anti-submarine warfare for their sensors…carrying anti-submarine torpedoes and able to accommodate a single medium sized, Z-9 ASW helicopter. Currently they had two of those helicopters embarked and conducting ASW sweeps in advance of the task force.
Maintaining station 10 kilometers in front of the light frigates, he had a Type 095 nuclear attack submarine also conducting ASW operation for the group.
Admiral Zhao was in overall command, and using the Yinchuan as the centerpiece of his Task Force, he felt that he had sufficient force to execute and accomplish his orders when it came to the single U.S. Navy Task Group he was approaching…though it may well get dicey.
In that regard, the closer he could close with them, the better.
But Admiral Zhao also knew that if the Japanese and the Americans brought up those other two large forces, and operated in a joint fashion facing his Task Force, that they would present much more than his task force could hope to handle.
He picked up the internal communications phone next to his desk and waited for the duty officer on the bridge to pick it up.
“Bridge,” came back the reply..
“Bridge, this is Admiral Zhao. Say status…course, speed, and time to intercept.”
“Sir,” came back the reply, “We are progressing on course at a speed of 28 knots. Time to intercept…a little less than 8 hours, sir.”
“Very, well, continue on course and immediately contact me with any new contacts or other issues. Inform Captain Li that I will join him on the bridge, at…” the Admrial looked at his watch, “07:00 hours.”
“Yes sir,” was the response from the bridge as the Admiral then returned his phone to its cradle.
“Eight hours,” the Admiral thought.
“Well, about 1 PM things are going to start to get interesting,” he thought as he began composing a draft for his communication to the American commander.
(Copyright 2015 Jeff Head)
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
May 23, 14:00 hours local
CINCPAC Headquarters
Honolulu, Hawaii
8:00 hours western Pacific


Admiral Jim D. Kirk was in the operations center monitoring the situation in the Western Pacific. He had been there all morning and had taken lunch there while being kept up to date by his staff on other situations across the Pacific Ocean.
Kirk was the Commander in Chief of all U.S. Navy forces in the Pacific, or CINCPAC. He had been in the position for eighteen months now, having been the commander of Carrier Strike Group (CSG) 5 forward deployed to Japan before that, the Captain of the USS Ronald Reagan, CVN-76, before that, and the 1st Captain of the U.S.S. Zumwalt, DDG-1000, before that. The Zumwalt was the first in class of the Zumwalt class, of which the Monsoor, which was part of what he was currently monitoring, was the her sister ship and 3rd in class.
“They pegged me for a fast mover back then,” he thought, “and I suppose they pegged me correctly in light of events since then.”
He had not conceived back at that time, when he had taken command of the pre-commissioning unit (PCU) USS Zummwalt, that his star would have risen as far as it did.
“Boy did I get some ribbing back then,“ he thought, “especially after we got that letter from William Shatner congratulating us on the upcoming christening of the vessel back then.”
“How did he put it?” thought the Admiral, ”let’s see…it went something like:

“…obviously your captain, Captain Kirk, is dear to my heart.”

“Jeez, I had never met the man,” the Admiral mused, “well, no matter, that command was really the start of some very special experiences for me.”
“I have to admit, how apropos it would have been had I been given command of the new USS Enterprise when she was launched. But, having had the Reagan, then Strike Group 5, and now being here at CINCPAC, I would not trade.”
Admiral Kirk believed he was acutely qualified for his current command…particularly given the geo-political and military conditions of the time.
He had commanded and become intimately acquainted with the highest technology that the U.S. Navy could bring to bear, with the ships, the personnel…and with the political leaders who ultimately decided how they were to be used.
While in Japan, he had met the Chief of Naval Operations of the Chinese People’s Republic Navy. He had sat in conference with the Chinese President. He had worked closely with the Japanese, Australian, Indian, and other chiefs of naval operations and their principle commanders.
The fact was, he was correct…no one in command position on the U.S. Navy side could have been better prepared for current events.
He personally knew Captain Henry Stevenson commanding the Monsoor and Task Force 21, and had helped mentor him. He had shared a lot of information, both via his own reports from the time, and with more recent conversations, about what he had learned about the Zumwalt class.
Kirk also personally knew Admiral Tim Stoker, who was the commander of the U.S. Navy 7th fleet which was forward deployed out of Yokosuka, Japan…where Kirk had commanded CSG 5 from, as well. In fact, Stoker was online now, as a part of the ongoing video-conferencing and monitoring of CSG 5s and TF 21’s progress this afternoon…or this morning over in the area.
“Henry, what is the George Washington’s disposition?” Kirk asked.
There was a slight delay as the question was relayed via satellite over the almost four thousand miles between Honolulu and Yokosuka.
“Sir, the George Washington Group is on station, now some 270 miles to the East of TF 21. He lead elements are about 75 miles closer.”
“Great, Henry,” Admiral Kirk responded. “How are her air assets deployed?”
“Well, she has an HV-22 that is preparing to leave the Monsoor right now. That aircraft just completed a COD to the Monsoor. She has a filight of three F-25 Charlies directing four MQ47 Bravos in the closer vicinity to the Monsoor.
“Those UCLASS aircraft, controlled by the Hogs, are monitoring the situation about 50 miles to the Monsoor’s west at this point. A Hawkeey, protected by four Super Hornets, is orbiting another 75 miles back.”
Kirk took all of this in.
He was pleased. The OPLAN was playing out as they had planned it, and they had plenty of insurance.
“Okay, I am going to step out for a couple of hours to address some other maters, but I will be back around 1600 hours as that PLAN Task Forces closes with the Monsoor. Keep me appraised in the mean-time of any important developments.”
Over the last year, Kirk had pushed specifically to make sure that CSG 5, which embarked Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 5, had had her air wing augmented. For that matter, all of the other carriers in the Pacific had gotten the same treatment.
“His,” carrier air wings were comprised of the following:

18 x F/A-18E Super Hornet Strike fighters
18 X F/A-18F Super Hornet Strike fighters
12 X F-35C Thunderbolt II Strike Aircraft
06 x EA-18G Growler Electronic Warfare Aircraft
06 x XQ-47B UCLASS unmanned Patrol/Strike aircraft
10 x SV-22 Osprey ASW aircraft
02 x HV-22 Osprey COD aircraft
06 x E2-D Advanced Hawkeye AEW&C aircraft

Kirk well knew that this amounted to a wartime deployment of 78 aircraft aboard the carriers in the Pacific. Those in the Atlantic and over in the Med and the Persian Gulf areas were deployed with a more modest 58 aircraft.
But Kirk has championed the Pacific effort (which he had referred to as the “Real” Pacific pivot), and insisted upon it in the current environment. He had received support all the way up the chain. The CNO, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, the Secretary of the Navy, the Secretary of Defense, and the President himself had all agreed. Oh, they had received some push back from the minority party in congress, and several media outlets had attempted to paint the effort as an overreaction at best, and provocative at worst.
“But, heck, that’s what you would expect from those folks,” he thought, “those are the same people who insisted on ‘leading from behind’ a couple of administrations ago and, at least in my estimation, helped create the conditions which demanded these measures…which I sincerely hope will help avoid any hostilities.”
In addition, the makeup of Carrier Strike Force 5 had also been augmented. Under Kirk’s leadership, it now consisted of:

1 x Nimitz nuclear aircraft carrier, the USS Geroge Washington, CVN-73
1 x Ticonderoga AEGIS cruiser, USS Anteitam, CG-55
1 x Burke Flight III AEGIS destroyer, USS Olendorf, DDG-121
1 x Burke Flight IIA AEGIS destroyer, USS Lassen, DDG-82
1 x Burke Flight II AEGIS destroyer, USS Steham, DDG-63
1 x Small Surface Combatant Frigate, USS Samuel Morrison, FFG-
1 x Small surface Combatant Frigate, USS Reuben James, FFG-
1 x Virginia Nuclear Attack Submarine, USS Texas, SSN-775
1 x Los Angeles ADCAP Nuclear Attack Submarine, USS Hampton, SSN-767

Nine powerful vessels comprising the CSG.
Kirk’s other four carrier groups, CSG 1 with the Carl Vinson and CSG 9 with the Ronald Reagan home ported at North Island and San Diego, CSG 3 with the John Stennis and CSG 11 with the Enterprise home ported at Everett and Kitsap in Washington, were all now configured very similarly.
At the current time, CINCPAC had the Ronald Reagan deployed over in the eastern Indian Ocean, west of Sumatra and Java, exercising with the Indian Navy’s Vikrant group. He had the Enterprise, the latest Ford Class Carrier, and first deployed to the Pacific, deployed west of Midway Island, performing exercises with the new Japanese carrier, which was their first purpose built carrier for fixed wing aircraft since World War II.
The USS Enterprise group and air wing were even more heavily augmented…and were conducting those exercises with the JMSDF after having recently completed their Composite Unit Training Exercises (COMPTEX) three months earlier.
It was going to prove that Kirk was right to have had all of those groups augmented…but not for the reasons he thought.
Those whom he and the U.S. political leadership were seeking to deter, and the events, nations, and leaders that they hoped to influence, were not going to react as they expected. (Copyright 2015 Jeff Head)
 
Top