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Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning

Liaoning (16; Chinese: 辽宁舰; pinyin: Liáoníng Jiàn) is a Chinese Type 001 aircraft carrier. The first aircraft carrier commissioned into the People's Liberation Army Navy Surface Force, she was originally classified as a training ship, intended to allow the Navy to experiment, train and gain familiarity with aircraft carrier operations. Following upgrades and additional training in late 2018, Chinese state media announced that the ship would shift to a combat role in 2019.[9]

Liaoning (16)
The aircraft carrier Liaoning in Hong Kong in 2017
Class overview
BuildersDalian Shipbuilding Industry
Operators People's Liberation Army Navy
Preceded byKiev-class aircraft carrier
Succeeded byType 002 Shandong
Completed1
History
Soviet UnionUkraine
NameRiga (1988) then Varyag (1990)
NamesakeCity of Riga, Latvia (1988) then Varyag, named for the Varangians (1990), the name Varyag was then adopted by another cruiser.
Ordered1983
Builder
Laid down6 December 1985
Launched4 December 1988
CompletedAbandoned (68% complete)[1]
Fate
  • Sold to a Chinese buyer, 1998
  • Transferred to the Chinese navy, 2002
China
Name
  • Liaoning
  • (Chinese: 辽宁舰)
NamesakeLiaoning Province
BuilderDalian Shipbuilding Industry
Completed2011
Commissioned25 September 2012
Motto(Simplified Chinese:保卫祖国,勇争第一):Defend the motherland, strive to be the first.[2]
StatusIn active service
General characteristics for Varyag as originally designed
Class and typeType 001, Kuznetsov-class aircraft carrier
TypeSTOBAR Aircraft carrier
Displacement
  • 43,000 tons, light[3][4]
  • 54,500 tons, normal[5]
  • 60,900 tons, full load [5]
Length
  • 306.4 m (1,005 ft 3 in) o/a[5]
  • 270 m (885 ft 10 in) w/l
Beam
  • 74.4 m (244 ft 1 in) o/a[5]
  • 35 m (114 ft 10 in) w/l
Installed powerSteam
Propulsion
Speed32 knots (59 km/h; 37 mph)
Range3,850 nmi (7,130 km; 4,430 mi) at 32 knots
Endurance45 days
Complement
  • 1,960 crew
  • 626 air group
  • 40 flag staff
Sensors and
processing systems
General characteristics for Liaoning after refit
Class and typeType 001 aircraft carrier
Armament
Aircraft carried

Originally laid down in 1985 for the Soviet Navy as the Kuznetsov-class aircraft carrier Riga, she was launched on 4 December 1988 and renamed Varyag in 1990.[10] After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, construction was halted and the ship was put up for sale by Ukraine. The stripped hulk was purchased in 1998 and towed to the Dalian naval shipyard in northeast China.

The ship was rebuilt and commissioned into the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) as Liaoning on 25 September 2012. Its Chinese ship class designation is Type 001. In November 2016, the political commissar of Liaoning, Commodore Li Dongyou, stated that Liaoning was combat-ready.[10]

Classification edit

The Kuznetsov-class ships were originally designated by the Soviet Navy as "тяжёлый авианесущий крейсер" (tyazholiy avianesushchiy kreyser, TAKR or TAVKR), meaning "heavy aircraft-carrying cruiser". In addition to aircraft, the ships were designed to carry P-700 Granit anti-ship cruise missiles that also form the main armament of the Kirov-class battlecruisers. This multirole capability allowed the ships to avoid classification as aircraft carriers, thus allowing them to pass through the Turkish Straits between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea. Under the Montreux Convention, aircraft carriers larger than 15,000 tons are not permitted to pass through the Straits, but there is no displacement limit on other types of capital ships from Black Sea powers.[11][12]

In contrast, the People's Liberation Army Navy considers Liaoning to be an aircraft carrier.[13] Since China is not located on the Black Sea and thus not considered a Black Sea power under the Montreux Convention, it does not need and cannot use the tonnage exemption for non-aircraft carrier capital ships. The ship was completed as an aircraft carrier, and cruise missiles were never installed. Liaoning is equipped only with air defense weapons and must use its aircraft for a surface attack.

History edit

Origin edit

The ship was laid down as Riga at Shipyard 444 (now Mykolaiv South) in Mykolaiv, Ukrainian SSR, on 6 December 1985.[14][15] Design work was undertaken by the Nevskoye Planning and Design Bureau.[16] Launched on 4 December 1988, the carrier was renamed Varyag in late 1990, after a previous similarly named cruiser launched in 1899. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the ship was only 68% complete.[1] Construction was halted, and the ship was put up for sale. The name Varyag was then adopted by another cruiser launched in 1983.

Sale edit

Ukraine approached China, India, and Russia as potential buyers.[1] China sent a high-level delegation in 1992, which reported that the ship was in good condition and recommended a purchase. However, the Chinese government declined to purchase the ship because of the international diplomatic situation at the time.[17] Unable to find a buyer, Ukraine left the ship to deteriorate in the elements.[18]

In 1998, the rusting hulk was sold at auction for $20 million to Agencia Turistica E Diversões Chong Lot Limitada, a company from Macau. Chong Lot proposed to tow Varyag to Macau under pretenses of conversion into a $200 million floating hotel and casino;[19] Western observers were suspicious of the deal since Chong Lot had no listed telephone number, was not located at its listed address, and was run by former officers in the Chinese Navy. Officials in Macau also denied Chong Lot's application to operate a casino. However, analysts noted that Varyag had deteriorated too much to be used as an operational warship and pointed out that the Chinese Navy was concentrating on submarines.[15][18] The Soviet carriers Kiev and Minsk had also been sold to China as tourist attractions.

In January 2015, further details emerged in an interview with Hong Kong-based businessman Xu Zengping by the South China Morning Post. Xu, a former military basketball player, reported that he had been commissioned by the PLAN to purchase the vessel on its behalf, with the floating hotel and casino as a cover story. He was warned that the Chinese Navy did not have the budget to buy the ship, and the Chinese government did not support the purchase. However, Xu was so impressed when touring the ship that he resolved to purchase it using his personal funds. The previous year, Xu had borrowed HK$230 million from a Hong Kong business friend, spending HK$6 million to create Chong Lot as a Macau shell corporation. He described a harrowing negotiation in Kyiv, lubricated by bribery and liquor, which helped to arrange victory at the auction. As a precaution, he shipped 40 tonnes of the carrier's blueprints to China overland in eight trucks.[17][20]

Transfer to China edit

 
Ex-Varyag under tow in Istanbul in 2001

The passage from Ukraine to China was even more troublesome than the purchase. In June 2000, Varyag was taken under tow. As the tugboat approached the Bosphorus, Turkey denied permission for the ship to pass through, citing the risk that a gust of wind would turn the ship widthwise and block the entire strait. Varyag spent the next 16 months being towed around the Black Sea, accruing towing charges of $8,500 a day as Chong Lot stopped paying its bills. The tugboat operator compared its fate to the Yellow Fleet that was stuck in the Suez Canal for eight years, and French thrillseekers even landed a helicopter on the ship.[18] Meanwhile, Chinese officials negotiated with Turkey, offering trade and tourism concessions.[21]

In August 2001, Turkey relented and agreed to allow the ship to pass. On 1 November 2001, the Bosphorus was cleared of all other traffic as Varyag was towed through.[21][22] On 2 November, Varyag also passed through the Dardanelles without incident. On 4 November, Varyag was caught in a force 10 gale and broke adrift while passing the Greek island of Skyros. The ship was taken back under tow on 6 November, after one sailor died while attempting to attach the tow lines.[23][24]

The Suez Canal does not permit passage of "dead" ships – those without an on-board power source – so the hulk was towed through the Strait of Gibraltar, around Pointe des Almadies and the Cape of Good Hope, past Cape Agulhas and into the Indian Ocean and through the Straits of Malacca at an average speed of 6 knots (11 km/h; 6.9 mph) across the 15,200-nautical-mile (28,200 km; 17,500 mi) journey. The tugboat fleet called for supplies en route at Piraeus, Greece; Las Palmas, Canary Islands; Maputo, Mozambique; and Singapore. Varyag entered Chinese waters on 20 February 2002, and arrived on 3 March at the Dalian naval shipyard in northeast China. The costs included $25 million to the Ukrainian government for the hull, nearly $500,000 in transit fees, and $5 million for 20 months of towing fees.[citation needed]

Xu Zengping estimated in 2015 that his total out-of-pocket cost was at least US$120 million. He insisted that he had never been reimbursed by the Chinese government, and had spent the last 18 years repaying his debts, in part by selling properties such as his home. A source familiar with the acquisition explained that the naval official, Ji Shengde, who initiated the mission had been in prison because of smuggling.[25]

Contrary to initial reports that the ship had no engines, Xu reported that all four original engines remained intact at the time of purchase, but had been shut down and preserved in grease seals.[26] A refit restored them to working order in 2011.

Modernization and refurbishment edit

701st Institute was tasked to redesign Varyag with Zhu Yingfu (朱英富) and Wu Xiaoguang (吴晓光) were assigned respectively as the general designer and deputy general designer. Wang Zhiguo (王治国) was assigned as the general system engineer, and Yang Lei (杨雷) was assigned as the general supervisor.[27] The workload of converting Varyag for operational use was equivalent to building ten new destroyers.[27] Varyag was moved in June 2005 to a dry dock at Dalian (38°56′06″N 121°36′51″E / 38.935°N 121.6141°E / 38.935; 121.6141 (Varyag)). Her hull was sandblasted, scaffolding erected, and the ship's island was painted in a red marine primer to treat metal corrosion.[28]

 
Liaoning at CSIC shipyard in Dalian, China (2012)

Observers have noted the installation of Type 348 active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar (four arrays) and Sea Eagle radar.[citation needed] The air defence system consists of the Type 1130 CIWS and the HQ-10 missile system. The anti-ship missile tubes would not be used, freeing up internal space for hangar or storage use. Russia has explored similar modifications to her sister ship Admiral Kuznetsov.[29]

In 2011 an analyst of DigitalGlobe (later: Maxar) has spotted Liaoning as an aircraft carrier.[30]

On 8 June 2011, General Chen Bingde made the first public acknowledgement of the ship's refit.[31] On 27 July 2011, the Chinese Defence Ministry announced it was refitting the vessel for "scientific research, experiment and training".[32]

In 2018, Asia Times reported that Sun Bo, a general manager of China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation, had allegedly passed on technical details of Liaoning to the Central Intelligence Agency. Sun was a general manager at the Dalian shipyard where the ship's refurbishment was done.[33]

Sea trials edit

 
Liaoning in the East China Sea (2020)

The ship undertook her first sea trials from 10 August 2011 to 15 August 2011.[34] On 29 November 2011 the carrier left port for her second set of trials.[35][36][37] The carrier completed her eighth sea trial between 7 and 21 June 2012 and returned to Dalian. In July 2012, the ship set out for the longest trials thus far, 25 days.[38] The carrier completed sea trials in early August 2012 and loaded Shenyang J-15 aircraft and KJ-88, YJ-83K and YJ-91 missiles in preparation for weapons systems trials.[39]

During sea trials, Liaoning experienced a steam burst in the engine compartment which forced the crew to evacuate some parts of the ship, and the ship lost power. The problem was ultimately resolved and power was restored, although the time duration of the problem has not been released by military officials.[40]

Handover to the Navy edit

On 23 September 2012, the aircraft carrier was handed over to the PLAN, and was commissioned on 25 September 2012.[41] At the commissioning ceremony, the carrier was officially named Liaoning, in honour of the province in which she was retrofitted.[42][43] On 26 December 2012, the People's Daily reported that it would take four to five years for Liaoning to reach full capacity.[44] As it was a training ship until 2018, Liaoning was not assigned to any of China's operational fleets.[45]

According to geopolitical analysts, China could use Liaoning and its future carriers to intimidate other countries that have territorial claims in the South China Sea, as well as extending air control further south of the disputed region.[46] In December 2016 the ship exercised in the Western Pacific, including passing through the Miyako Strait between the Japanese islands of Miyako-jima and Okinawa.[47][48] On 18 April 2018, Liaoning took part in the navy's live-fire exercises in the South China Sea, involving 76 fighter jets and 48 warships and submarines. The drills came after a large military display presided over by Chinese paramount leader Xi Jinping, and were condemned by Taiwan as "military intimidation".[49]

Design edit

The Type 001 is built upon the unfinished hull of Kuznetsov-class aircraft carrier Varyag. Unlike Soviet Kuznetsov, the Chinese Type 001 ships are configured solely as aircraft carriers. The cruise missile launchers were never installed, and the launcher base was removed during the refit to incorporate a larger hangar bay. The air-defense system consists of FL-3000N surface-to-air-missiles and the Type 1130 CIWS.[50][51]

In August 2014, the Chinese-language Shanghai Morning Post listed that CNS Liaoning would carry 36 aircraft: 24 Shenyang J-15 fighters, six Changhe Z-18F anti-submarine warfare (ASW) helicopters, four Changhe Z-18J airborne early warning helicopters and two Harbin Z-9C rescue helicopters. The Chinese carrier aircraft inventory is similar to a balanced combat and support aircraft approach intended for Soviet aircraft carriers, which supported nuclear submarines, large surface combatants, and land-based strike bombers performing anti-access roles.

The Soviet lineage has its limitations. The air wing lacks long-range radar and anti-submarine fixed-wing aircraft, needing support from shore-based aircraft such as Tupolev Tu-154 ASW and Shaanxi Y-8 AWACS aircraft. The U.S. Department of Defense noted that J-15s will have below normal range and armament when operating from the carrier, due to limits imposed by the ski-jump takeoff system.[52] The lack of a carrier onboard delivery aircraft like the United States Navy (USN) Grumman C-2 Greyhound also limits logistics capabilities. Liaoning would need extensive land-based support to oppose a USN carrier strike group; however, it would be potent against the Vietnam People's Navy and the Philippine Navy. Deficiencies will likely be corrected with future aircraft carriers, which are expected to be larger with conventional takeoff decks and catapult launching for heavier fighters, plus fixed-wing radar and anti-submarine patrol aircraft.[53]

Operational history edit

Home port edit

Liaoning is visible on satellite imagery regularly berthed at a large jetty at the Yuchi Naval Base (near Huangdao) in China's Shandong province since 2013; this is reported as its home port.[54][55]

Maintenance edit

In August 2018, the South China Morning Post reported that Liaoning was berthed at Dalian undergoing its first refit since its commissioning in 2012. The radar above Liaoning's bridge and the air traffic control at the rear of the island superstructure were noted to have been removed, and scaffolding was also noted around the command center.[56] The refit was completed in January 2019, spending about six months. The ship superstructure was modified with an improved design, and the flight deck was completely stripped and refurbished.[57]

Training and aircraft handling edit

 
Liaoning at sea (2018)

On 4 November 2012, the People's Liberation Army's website (Chinese: 中国军网) reported that Shenyang J-15s had performed carrier touch-and-go training.[58][59] On 25 November 2012, China announced that J-15s had made five successful arrested landings on Liaoning.[60][61] In June 2013, a second round of flight tests began on board CNS Liaoning, with personnel from the fleet air arm of the Brazilian Navy providing carrier training support to the People's Liberation Army Navy Air Force who operate the J-15s.[62][63]

In August 2014, based on an article from Chinese state media, Western news outlets reported that two pilots had been killed testing jets slated to operate from CNS Liaoning.[64][65] Chinese military officials stated such reports were misleading, and clarified that deaths were in fact unrelated with tests on the carrier.[66][67] The original Chinese article from Xinhua also did not link the deaths with the J-15 nor mention any loss of such aircraft.[68]

On 5 April 2021, the aircraft carrier Liaoning, destroyers Chengdu, Taiyuan, Nanchang, frigate Huanggang and supply ship Hulunhu were spotted between Okinawa and Miyako Island.[69]

In December 2021, Liaoning carrier group was deployed to Yellow Sea, East China Sea, and Western Pacific.[70]

In May 2022, the Liaoning and its carrier strike group conducted drills in the East China Sea and they were sighted near Miyako Island by the JMSDF.[71] Japanese analysts noted a very high operational tempo from the Liaoning, suggesting China's growing confidence and maturity in aircraft carrier operations.[72][73]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • varyagworld.com
  • Transformation of the Varyag into a PLAN Aircraft Carrier
  • physical location in the World
  • Satellite Photo of Varyag in Dalian, China from Google Maps
  • Chinese carrier operations
  • "China's aircraft carrier anchors in military port" Slideshow, People's Daily Xinhua 10:14, 27 February 2013

chinese, aircraft, carrier, liaoning, type, redirects, here, other, uses, type, disambiguation, liaoning, chinese, 辽宁舰, pinyin, liáoníng, jiàn, chinese, type, aircraft, carrier, first, aircraft, carrier, commissioned, into, people, liberation, army, navy, surf. Type 001 redirects here For other uses see Type 1 disambiguation Liaoning 16 Chinese 辽宁舰 pinyin Liaoning Jian is a Chinese Type 001 aircraft carrier The first aircraft carrier commissioned into the People s Liberation Army Navy Surface Force she was originally classified as a training ship intended to allow the Navy to experiment train and gain familiarity with aircraft carrier operations Following upgrades and additional training in late 2018 Chinese state media announced that the ship would shift to a combat role in 2019 9 Liaoning 16 The aircraft carrier Liaoning in Hong Kong in 2017Class overviewBuildersDalian Shipbuilding IndustryOperators People s Liberation Army NavyPreceded byKiev class aircraft carrierSucceeded byType 002 ShandongCompleted1History Soviet Union UkraineNameRiga 1988 then Varyag 1990 NamesakeCity of Riga Latvia 1988 then Varyag named for the Varangians 1990 the name Varyag was then adopted by another cruiser Ordered1983BuilderMykolaiv South Nevskoye Planning and Design BureauLaid down6 December 1985Launched4 December 1988CompletedAbandoned 68 complete 1 FateSold to a Chinese buyer 1998 Transferred to the Chinese navy 2002ChinaNameLiaoning Chinese 辽宁舰 NamesakeLiaoning ProvinceBuilderDalian Shipbuilding IndustryCompleted2011Commissioned25 September 2012Motto Simplified Chinese 保卫祖国 勇争第一 Defend the motherland strive to be the first 2 StatusIn active serviceGeneral characteristics for Varyag as originally designedClass and typeType 001 Kuznetsov class aircraft carrierTypeSTOBAR Aircraft carrierDisplacement43 000 tons light 3 4 54 500 tons normal 5 60 900 tons full load 5 Length306 4 m 1 005 ft 3 in o a 5 270 m 885 ft 10 in w lBeam74 4 m 244 ft 1 in o a 5 35 m 114 ft 10 in w lInstalled powerSteamPropulsionSteam TV12 turbines 8 KVG 4 boilers 6 4 shafts 200 000 hp 150 MW citation needed 4 50 000 hp 37 MW turbines citation needed 9 2 011 hp 1 500 kW turbogenerators citation needed 6 2 011 hp 1 500 kW diesel generators citation needed 4 fixed pitch propellers citation needed Speed32 knots 59 km h 37 mph Range3 850 nmi 7 130 km 4 430 mi at 32 knotsEndurance45 daysComplement1 960 crew 626 air group 40 flag staffSensors and processing systemsType 346 radar S band AESA Type 382 Radar 3 D searchGeneral characteristics for Liaoning after refitClass and typeType 001 aircraft carrierArmament3 Type 1130 CIWS 3 HQ 10 18 cell missile system 8 Aircraft carried24 Shenyang J 15 7 6 Changhe Z 18F 6 Changhe Z 18J 2 Harbin Z 9 Total of 40 fixed wing and rotary wing aircraft citation needed Originally laid down in 1985 for the Soviet Navy as the Kuznetsov class aircraft carrier Riga she was launched on 4 December 1988 and renamed Varyag in 1990 10 After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 construction was halted and the ship was put up for sale by Ukraine The stripped hulk was purchased in 1998 and towed to the Dalian naval shipyard in northeast China The ship was rebuilt and commissioned into the People s Liberation Army Navy PLAN as Liaoning on 25 September 2012 Its Chinese ship class designation is Type 001 In November 2016 the political commissar of Liaoning Commodore Li Dongyou stated that Liaoning was combat ready 10 Contents 1 Classification 2 History 2 1 Origin 2 2 Sale 2 3 Transfer to China 2 4 Modernization and refurbishment 2 5 Sea trials 2 6 Handover to the Navy 3 Design 4 Operational history 4 1 Home port 4 2 Maintenance 4 3 Training and aircraft handling 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksClassification editSee also Montreux Convention Regarding the Regime of the Straits Aircraft carriers The Kuznetsov class ships were originally designated by the Soviet Navy as tyazhyolyj avianesushij krejser tyazholiy avianesushchiy kreyser TAKR or TAVKR meaning heavy aircraft carrying cruiser In addition to aircraft the ships were designed to carry P 700 Granit anti ship cruise missiles that also form the main armament of the Kirov class battlecruisers This multirole capability allowed the ships to avoid classification as aircraft carriers thus allowing them to pass through the Turkish Straits between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea Under the Montreux Convention aircraft carriers larger than 15 000 tons are not permitted to pass through the Straits but there is no displacement limit on other types of capital ships from Black Sea powers 11 12 In contrast the People s Liberation Army Navy considers Liaoning to be an aircraft carrier 13 Since China is not located on the Black Sea and thus not considered a Black Sea power under the Montreux Convention it does not need and cannot use the tonnage exemption for non aircraft carrier capital ships The ship was completed as an aircraft carrier and cruise missiles were never installed Liaoning is equipped only with air defense weapons and must use its aircraft for a surface attack History editOrigin edit For other ships with the same name see Russian ship Varyag The ship was laid down as Riga at Shipyard 444 now Mykolaiv South in Mykolaiv Ukrainian SSR on 6 December 1985 14 15 Design work was undertaken by the Nevskoye Planning and Design Bureau 16 Launched on 4 December 1988 the carrier was renamed Varyag in late 1990 after a previous similarly named cruiser launched in 1899 When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 the ship was only 68 complete 1 Construction was halted and the ship was put up for sale The name Varyag was then adopted by another cruiser launched in 1983 Sale edit Ukraine approached China India and Russia as potential buyers 1 China sent a high level delegation in 1992 which reported that the ship was in good condition and recommended a purchase However the Chinese government declined to purchase the ship because of the international diplomatic situation at the time 17 Unable to find a buyer Ukraine left the ship to deteriorate in the elements 18 In 1998 the rusting hulk was sold at auction for 20 million to Agencia Turistica E Diversoes Chong Lot Limitada a company from Macau Chong Lot proposed to tow Varyag to Macau under pretenses of conversion into a 200 million floating hotel and casino 19 Western observers were suspicious of the deal since Chong Lot had no listed telephone number was not located at its listed address and was run by former officers in the Chinese Navy Officials in Macau also denied Chong Lot s application to operate a casino However analysts noted that Varyag had deteriorated too much to be used as an operational warship and pointed out that the Chinese Navy was concentrating on submarines 15 18 The Soviet carriers Kiev and Minsk had also been sold to China as tourist attractions In January 2015 further details emerged in an interview with Hong Kong based businessman Xu Zengping by the South China Morning Post Xu a former military basketball player reported that he had been commissioned by the PLAN to purchase the vessel on its behalf with the floating hotel and casino as a cover story He was warned that the Chinese Navy did not have the budget to buy the ship and the Chinese government did not support the purchase However Xu was so impressed when touring the ship that he resolved to purchase it using his personal funds The previous year Xu had borrowed HK 230 million from a Hong Kong business friend spending HK 6 million to create Chong Lot as a Macau shell corporation He described a harrowing negotiation in Kyiv lubricated by bribery and liquor which helped to arrange victory at the auction As a precaution he shipped 40 tonnes of the carrier s blueprints to China overland in eight trucks 17 20 Transfer to China edit nbsp Ex Varyag under tow in Istanbul in 2001The passage from Ukraine to China was even more troublesome than the purchase In June 2000 Varyag was taken under tow As the tugboat approached the Bosphorus Turkey denied permission for the ship to pass through citing the risk that a gust of wind would turn the ship widthwise and block the entire strait Varyag spent the next 16 months being towed around the Black Sea accruing towing charges of 8 500 a day as Chong Lot stopped paying its bills The tugboat operator compared its fate to the Yellow Fleet that was stuck in the Suez Canal for eight years and French thrillseekers even landed a helicopter on the ship 18 Meanwhile Chinese officials negotiated with Turkey offering trade and tourism concessions 21 In August 2001 Turkey relented and agreed to allow the ship to pass On 1 November 2001 the Bosphorus was cleared of all other traffic as Varyag was towed through 21 22 On 2 November Varyag also passed through the Dardanelles without incident On 4 November Varyag was caught in a force 10 gale and broke adrift while passing the Greek island of Skyros The ship was taken back under tow on 6 November after one sailor died while attempting to attach the tow lines 23 24 The Suez Canal does not permit passage of dead ships those without an on board power source so the hulk was towed through the Strait of Gibraltar around Pointe des Almadies and the Cape of Good Hope past Cape Agulhas and into the Indian Ocean and through the Straits of Malacca at an average speed of 6 knots 11 km h 6 9 mph across the 15 200 nautical mile 28 200 km 17 500 mi journey The tugboat fleet called for supplies en route at Piraeus Greece Las Palmas Canary Islands Maputo Mozambique and Singapore Varyag entered Chinese waters on 20 February 2002 and arrived on 3 March at the Dalian naval shipyard in northeast China The costs included 25 million to the Ukrainian government for the hull nearly 500 000 in transit fees and 5 million for 20 months of towing fees citation needed Xu Zengping estimated in 2015 that his total out of pocket cost was at least US 120 million He insisted that he had never been reimbursed by the Chinese government and had spent the last 18 years repaying his debts in part by selling properties such as his home A source familiar with the acquisition explained that the naval official Ji Shengde who initiated the mission had been in prison because of smuggling 25 Contrary to initial reports that the ship had no engines Xu reported that all four original engines remained intact at the time of purchase but had been shut down and preserved in grease seals 26 A refit restored them to working order in 2011 Modernization and refurbishment edit 701st Institute was tasked to redesign Varyag with Zhu Yingfu 朱英富 and Wu Xiaoguang 吴晓光 were assigned respectively as the general designer and deputy general designer Wang Zhiguo 王治国 was assigned as the general system engineer and Yang Lei 杨雷 was assigned as the general supervisor 27 The workload of converting Varyag for operational use was equivalent to building ten new destroyers 27 Varyag was moved in June 2005 to a dry dock at Dalian 38 56 06 N 121 36 51 E 38 935 N 121 6141 E 38 935 121 6141 Varyag Her hull was sandblasted scaffolding erected and the ship s island was painted in a red marine primer to treat metal corrosion 28 nbsp Liaoning at CSIC shipyard in Dalian China 2012 Observers have noted the installation of Type 348 active electronically scanned array AESA radar four arrays and Sea Eagle radar citation needed The air defence system consists of the Type 1130 CIWS and the HQ 10 missile system The anti ship missile tubes would not be used freeing up internal space for hangar or storage use Russia has explored similar modifications to her sister ship Admiral Kuznetsov 29 In 2011 an analyst of DigitalGlobe later Maxar has spotted Liaoning as an aircraft carrier 30 On 8 June 2011 General Chen Bingde made the first public acknowledgement of the ship s refit 31 On 27 July 2011 the Chinese Defence Ministry announced it was refitting the vessel for scientific research experiment and training 32 In 2018 Asia Times reported that Sun Bo a general manager of China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation had allegedly passed on technical details of Liaoning to the Central Intelligence Agency Sun was a general manager at the Dalian shipyard where the ship s refurbishment was done 33 Sea trials edit nbsp Liaoning in the East China Sea 2020 The ship undertook her first sea trials from 10 August 2011 to 15 August 2011 34 On 29 November 2011 the carrier left port for her second set of trials 35 36 37 The carrier completed her eighth sea trial between 7 and 21 June 2012 and returned to Dalian In July 2012 the ship set out for the longest trials thus far 25 days 38 The carrier completed sea trials in early August 2012 and loaded Shenyang J 15 aircraft and KJ 88 YJ 83K and YJ 91 missiles in preparation for weapons systems trials 39 During sea trials Liaoning experienced a steam burst in the engine compartment which forced the crew to evacuate some parts of the ship and the ship lost power The problem was ultimately resolved and power was restored although the time duration of the problem has not been released by military officials 40 Handover to the Navy edit On 23 September 2012 the aircraft carrier was handed over to the PLAN and was commissioned on 25 September 2012 41 At the commissioning ceremony the carrier was officially named Liaoning in honour of the province in which she was retrofitted 42 43 On 26 December 2012 the People s Daily reported that it would take four to five years for Liaoning to reach full capacity 44 As it was a training ship until 2018 Liaoning was not assigned to any of China s operational fleets 45 According to geopolitical analysts China could use Liaoning and its future carriers to intimidate other countries that have territorial claims in the South China Sea as well as extending air control further south of the disputed region 46 In December 2016 the ship exercised in the Western Pacific including passing through the Miyako Strait between the Japanese islands of Miyako jima and Okinawa 47 48 On 18 April 2018 Liaoning took part in the navy s live fire exercises in the South China Sea involving 76 fighter jets and 48 warships and submarines The drills came after a large military display presided over by Chinese paramount leader Xi Jinping and were condemned by Taiwan as military intimidation 49 Design editMain article Kuznetsov class aircraft carrier Design The Type 001 is built upon the unfinished hull of Kuznetsov class aircraft carrier Varyag Unlike Soviet Kuznetsov the Chinese Type 001 ships are configured solely as aircraft carriers The cruise missile launchers were never installed and the launcher base was removed during the refit to incorporate a larger hangar bay The air defense system consists of FL 3000N surface to air missiles and the Type 1130 CIWS 50 51 In August 2014 the Chinese language Shanghai Morning Post listed that CNS Liaoning would carry 36 aircraft 24 Shenyang J 15 fighters six Changhe Z 18F anti submarine warfare ASW helicopters four Changhe Z 18J airborne early warning helicopters and two Harbin Z 9C rescue helicopters The Chinese carrier aircraft inventory is similar to a balanced combat and support aircraft approach intended for Soviet aircraft carriers which supported nuclear submarines large surface combatants and land based strike bombers performing anti access roles The Soviet lineage has its limitations The air wing lacks long range radar and anti submarine fixed wing aircraft needing support from shore based aircraft such as Tupolev Tu 154 ASW and Shaanxi Y 8 AWACS aircraft The U S Department of Defense noted that J 15s will have below normal range and armament when operating from the carrier due to limits imposed by the ski jump takeoff system 52 The lack of a carrier onboard delivery aircraft like the United States Navy USN Grumman C 2 Greyhound also limits logistics capabilities Liaoning would need extensive land based support to oppose a USN carrier strike group however it would be potent against the Vietnam People s Navy and the Philippine Navy Deficiencies will likely be corrected with future aircraft carriers which are expected to be larger with conventional takeoff decks and catapult launching for heavier fighters plus fixed wing radar and anti submarine patrol aircraft 53 Operational history editHome port edit Liaoning is visible on satellite imagery regularly berthed at a large jetty at the Yuchi Naval Base near Huangdao in China s Shandong province since 2013 this is reported as its home port 54 55 Maintenance edit In August 2018 the South China Morning Post reported that Liaoning was berthed at Dalian undergoing its first refit since its commissioning in 2012 The radar above Liaoning s bridge and the air traffic control at the rear of the island superstructure were noted to have been removed and scaffolding was also noted around the command center 56 The refit was completed in January 2019 spending about six months The ship superstructure was modified with an improved design and the flight deck was completely stripped and refurbished 57 Training and aircraft handling edit nbsp Liaoning at sea 2018 On 4 November 2012 the People s Liberation Army s website Chinese 中国军网 reported that Shenyang J 15s had performed carrier touch and go training 58 59 On 25 November 2012 China announced that J 15s had made five successful arrested landings on Liaoning 60 61 In June 2013 a second round of flight tests began on board CNS Liaoning with personnel from the fleet air arm of the Brazilian Navy providing carrier training support to the People s Liberation Army Navy Air Force who operate the J 15s 62 63 In August 2014 based on an article from Chinese state media Western news outlets reported that two pilots had been killed testing jets slated to operate from CNS Liaoning 64 65 Chinese military officials stated such reports were misleading and clarified that deaths were in fact unrelated with tests on the carrier 66 67 The original Chinese article from Xinhua also did not link the deaths with the J 15 nor mention any loss of such aircraft 68 On 5 April 2021 the aircraft carrier Liaoning destroyers Chengdu Taiyuan Nanchang frigate Huanggang and supply ship Hulunhu were spotted between Okinawa and Miyako Island 69 In December 2021 Liaoning carrier group was deployed to Yellow Sea East China Sea and Western Pacific 70 In May 2022 the Liaoning and its carrier strike group conducted drills in the East China Sea and they were sighted near Miyako Island by the JMSDF 71 Japanese analysts noted a very high operational tempo from the Liaoning suggesting China s growing confidence and maturity in aircraft carrier operations 72 73 See also edit nbsp China portalList of aircraft carriers Chinese aircraft carrier programme Chinese aircraft carrier Shandong Chinese aircraft carrier Fujian List of aircraft carriers of Russia and the Soviet Union Kuznetsov class aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya a Kiev class aircraft carrier that was also originally built for the Soviet Navy and later sold to India in 2004 Liu Zhe Captain of the LiaoningReferences edit a b c Ukrainians Slice Up Carrier Ulyanovsk Defense News 21 27 September 1992 A second aircraft carrier is 68 percent complete and lacks electronics weapons systems and aircraft but sale of the carrier to India or China is a fairy tale scenario said Antonov Russia is the only realistic potential purchaser 細看福建艦艦徽大有玄機 使命任務已經標註 寓意深遠 網易 22 June 2022 Archived from the original on 22 June 2022 Retrieved 22 June 2022 Admiral Flota Sovetskogo Soyuza Kuznetsov Rusnavy com Archived from the original on 7 October 2017 Retrieved 22 December 2014 Kuznetsov Class Project 1143 5 Globalsecurity org 7 September 2011 Archived from the original on 8 October 2014 Retrieved 22 December 2014 a b c d 辽宁舰 我国第一艘航空母舰 in Simplified Chinese 央视新闻客户端 26 April 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2022 Source New Russian Made Boilers for Admiral Kuznetsov to Serve 25 Years Rick Joe 20 May 2021 China s J 15 Carrierborne Fighter Sizing up the Competition The Diplomat Retrieved 18 June 2022 Liaoning Varyag Aircraft Carrier SinoDefence Archived from the original on 29 March 2016 Retrieved 27 March 2016 Beijing says Liaoning is now a combat carrier Asia Times 25 April 2019 Retrieved 10 September 2020 a b How does China s first aircraft carrier stack up CSIS China Power 9 December 2015 Archived from the original on 20 September 2016 Retrieved 25 August 2016 14 San Diego L Rev 681 1976 1977 Kiev and the Montreux Convention The Aircraft Carrier That Became a Cruiser to Squeeze through the Turkish Straits Froman F David The Tbilisi and the Montreux Convention Osaarchivum org Archived from the original on 1 June 2012 Retrieved 8 December 2011 Tao Zhang 20 October 2015 Captain delegation of U S Navy visits Chinese Liaoning aircraft carrier Ministry of National Defense of the People s Republic of China Archived from the original on 4 December 2016 Retrieved 14 November 2016 Rochlin G I La Porte T R Roberts H Autumn 1987 The Self Designing High Reliability Organization Aircraft Carrier Flight Operations at Sea Naval War College Review Naval War College LI 3 Footnote 39 Archived from the original on 13 December 2006 a b Storey I Ji Y Winter 2004 China s Aircraft Carrier 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February 2017 Retrieved 24 February 2017 Holland Ben 1 November 2001 After 16 months Turkey lets half built aircraft carrier pass through Bosporus AP Worldstream Associated Press Archived from the original on 29 March 2015 Retrieved 17 December 2014 UPI Insider Chicago Sun Times Sun Times Media Group 9 November 2001 Archived from the original on 29 March 2015 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Varyag emerges from storm Kyiv Post 8 November 2001 Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Minnie Chan 20 January 2015 Mission impossible II the battle to get China s aircraft carrier home South China Morning Post Archived from the original on 20 January 2015 Retrieved 20 January 2015 Minnie Chan 19 January 2015 Mission impossible How one man bought China its first aircraft carrier South China Morning Post Archived from the original on 21 January 2015 Retrieved 20 January 2015 a b Designers Archived from the original on 12 September 2017 Retrieved 14 March 2017 The 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August 2014 LaGrone Sam 8 September 2014 Two PLA Pilots Have Died Testing Fighters for Chinese Carrier USNI News United States Naval Institute Archived from the original on 11 October 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2014 China reveals two aircraft carrier test pilots killed Yahoo 7 Archived from the original on 7 September 2014 Retrieved 7 September 2014 China denies reports of pilots killed in J 15 tests Archived from the original on 13 January 2015 Retrieved 13 January 2015 军方否认2名殉职飞行员系在航母测试中牺牲 7 September 2014 Archived from the original on 4 February 2015 Retrieved 13 January 2015 中央军委主席习近平签署命令 给1个单位 1名个人授予荣誉称号 Archived from the original on 28 September 2014 Retrieved 13 January 2015 Chinese Type 055 destroyer joins aircraft carrier group for first time South China Morning Post 6 April 2021 Retrieved 7 April 2021 Mahadzir Dzirhan 31 December 2021 Chinese Carrier Strike Group Liaoning Returns From Deployment USNI News Chinese Carrier Strike Group Now Operating in the East China Sea 23 May 2022 Nemoto Ryo 11 May 2022 China aircraft carrier stages 100 plus takeoffs near Okinawa islands Nikkei Asia Sutton H I 17 June 2022 China Launches First Aircraft Carrier Which Rivals U S Navy s Naval News External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to PLANS Liaoning CV 16 varyagworld com Transformation of the Varyag into a PLAN Aircraft Carrier Varyag Aircraft Carrier article on sinodefence com physical location in the World Satellite Photo of Varyag in Dalian China from Google Maps Chinese carrier operations China s aircraft carrier anchors in military port Slideshow People s Daily Xinhua 10 14 27 February 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning amp oldid 1179899990, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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