December 10, 2024

Chinese Submarine Drone Discovered Near Gateway To Indian Ocean

The latest underwater drone found by fishermen may indicate that China is surveying Indonesian waters. This may have strategic implications if it helps Chinese Navy submarines and warships enter the Indian Ocean.

Indonesian fishermen found an underwater drone on December 20th. Based on photographs we can say with some confidence that the drone is closely related to the Chinese Sea Wing family. The find was reported in local media (in Indonesian). It was discovered near Selayar Island in the South Sulawes, far away from China’s adjacent waters.

The find is close to two potential routes between the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean. These routes, the Sunda Strait and Lombok Strait, may be important in wartime. Intelligence gathered by the drone may be valuable to the Chinese Navy if their submarines intend to use these straits.

The object is a type of drone known as a glider. These are unpowered so must use something called variable-buoyancy propulsion. This involves inflating and deflating a balloon-like device filled with pressurized oil. This causes them to sink before rising to the surface again. As they do so they travel along, aided by wings. And as they go, they are gathering data on the ocean environment.

Indonesian based security & defense poster @Jatosint was quick to post the find on Twitter, and make the connection to the Chinese-made Sea Wing glider. Note that the device is upside down in the photos.

The data gathered can included temperature, turbidity, salinity, chlorophyll and oxygen levels. This data may sound innocuous and it is often used for scientific research. But it can also be extremely valuable to naval planners. Especially supporting submarine operations. The better a navy knows the waters, the better it is able to hide its submarines.

The US, France and other countries build and operate similar gliders. However, key characteristics of the Chinese type, which are not found on other similar underwater glides, are present. The nose cone has three circular sensor windows with the central one larger than the outer two. The wings have a folding mechanism and the antenna extends directly out of the center of the tail cone. The vertical stabilizer, like a tail fin, is seen underneath, Ordinarily the devicde would be up the other way with it pointing upwards,

Sea Wing gliders are known to be launched by China’s specialist survey ships. In December 2019 the survey ship Xiangyanghong 06 launched around 12 of the drones into the Eastern Indian Ocean. The one found may be one of these, but it seems unlikely given the ocean currents.

Another Sea Wing glider was found by Indonesian fishermen in March 2019. This was in the Riau Islands, much closer to the South China Sea. The exact variant of Sea Wing was different, but the craft was very similar. However this is enough to suggest that they were deployed at different times and likely in different places. Additionally, camera-like sensors were apparently still operating when it was recovered. This suggests that it was deployed more decently.

Where the glider was originally deployed, and what it was doin, remain unclear. But these craft can provide valuable military intelligence.

China previously protested when it found a similar U.S. Navy glider in international waters near its coast. On December 15, 2016 a Chinese ship plucked a U.S. Navy LBS-G ( Littoral Battlespace Sensing-Glider) out of the South China Sea. The glider was in the process of being recovered by USNS Bowditch. The drone was only returned after the incident escalated.

This incident is unlikely to escalate in the same way, but does serve to draw attention to China’s increasingly assertive maritime activities. These gliders may, in some cases, be innocent, but they are naturally viewed with suspicion. It may be evidence that China is reconnoitering potential submarine routes into the Indian Ocean, through Indonesian waters. Or some other naval plan.

Source: Naval News

Author

  • Shantanu K. Bansal

    Founder of IADN. He has more than 10 years of experience in research and analysis. An award winning researcher, he writes for the leading defence and security journals, think-tanks and in-service publications. He is a senior consultant at the Indian Army Training Command (ARTRAC), Shimla. Contact him at: Shantanukbansal2@gmail.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *