joe308 wrote:I�ve always wondered why so many countries own and operate submarines. Have u ever asked yourself that question? Once you remove the USA, UK, USSR and China from the list (for oblivious reasons) you are left with a whole lot of countries who, IMHO, have wasted tons of money of a defense purchase that seems totally useless to them. I have to wonder what better purposes money spent on submarines could have been put to in such countries as Vietnam, Brazil, Indonesian or Azerbaijan (really?)
JOE,
One shouldn't just look at the major powers that you named.If you look closer at regional tensions or local rivalries, you will see why these other countries even maintain sub fleets.
For example, Greece and Turkey both have submarines since those two have had distrust for each other ever since the Greeks revolted and freed themselves from Ottoman Empire rule.
Taiwan/ROC has submarines because it needs a counter to China's massive sub fleet and surface fleet that may invade their island one day.
Japan, which you didn't name among the powers above, also has subs to counter against China and other possible threats such as North Korea or Russia. And Japan's Maritime Self-Defence Force has one of the best sub forces in the region.
Malaysia has two Scorpene class subs as a counter to Singapore's Swedish made subs not to mention Indonesia's Type 209s and Type 206s from Germany/South Korea.
While it can BE argued that Israel has subs as well to OFFSET the fact it is surrounded by many enemies that could outnumber her numerically on the naval front as well, their recent acquisition of the
Dolphin class subs, which possibly have nuclear missiles, is aimed squarely at countering Iran's nuclear threat.
No doubt that Timmy or Maxim or someone else will probably correct me if I got any details of any of the situations above wrong, but I think I got the gist...
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It can probably be also argued that for other nations with more limited military funds that they cannot spend on capital ships such as carriers or large numbers of surface ships, having a sub might be a "great equalizer" since their ability to slip undetected under an escort screen allows them to target the capital ships and amphibious transports of an enemy fleet. Of course their ability to penetrate an enemy fleet is relative to how good the enemy's ASW is, but it gives these smaller nations the capability to attack at the heart of an enemy fleet.
Subs can also disrupt an enemy nation's maritime commerce much like surface raiders do, and would be much harder to intercept; Germany and the US both used their sub fleets to disrupt enemy merchant ships in the Atlantic and Pacific, respectively. Germany, twice , in both world wars.
Furthermore, modern subs ' ability to launch missiles, whether ballistic or even just SSMs/cruise missiles, would allow them to strike undetected from within enemy waters at targets of opportunity.Of course, not all the countries I named above have this ability, but some such as Israel do.
[quote="joe308"]I�ve always wondered why so many countries own and operate submarines. Have u ever asked yourself that question? Once you remove the USA, UK, USSR and China from the list (for oblivious reasons) you are left with a whole lot of countries who, IMHO, have wasted tons of money of a defense purchase that seems totally useless to them. I have to wonder what better purposes money spent on submarines could have been put to in such countries as Vietnam, Brazil, Indonesian or Azerbaijan (really?)[/quote]
JOE,
One shouldn't just look at the major powers that you named.If you look closer at regional tensions or local rivalries, you will see why these other countries even maintain sub fleets.
For example, Greece and Turkey both have submarines since those two have had distrust for each other ever since the Greeks revolted and freed themselves from Ottoman Empire rule.
Taiwan/ROC has submarines because it needs a counter to China's massive sub fleet and surface fleet that may invade their island one day.
Japan, which you didn't name among the powers above, also has subs to counter against China and other possible threats such as North Korea or Russia. And Japan's Maritime Self-Defence Force has one of the best sub forces in the region.
Malaysia has two Scorpene class subs as a counter to Singapore's Swedish made subs not to mention Indonesia's Type 209s and Type 206s from Germany/South Korea.
While it can BE argued that Israel has subs as well to OFFSET the fact it is surrounded by many enemies that could outnumber her numerically on the naval front as well, their recent acquisition of the [url=https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/meet-israels-super-dolphin-class-submarine-armed-nukes-42652]Dolphin class subs, which possibly have nuclear missiles[/url], is aimed squarely at countering Iran's nuclear threat.
No doubt that Timmy or Maxim or someone else will probably correct me if I got any details of any of the situations above wrong, but I think I got the gist...
-------------------------------------------
It can probably be also argued that for other nations with more limited military funds that they cannot spend on capital ships such as carriers or large numbers of surface ships, having a sub might be a "great equalizer" since their ability to slip undetected under an escort screen allows them to target the capital ships and amphibious transports of an enemy fleet. Of course their ability to penetrate an enemy fleet is relative to how good the enemy's ASW is, but it gives these smaller nations the capability to attack at the heart of an enemy fleet.
Subs can also disrupt an enemy nation's maritime commerce much like surface raiders do, and would be much harder to intercept; Germany and the US both used their sub fleets to disrupt enemy merchant ships in the Atlantic and Pacific, respectively. Germany, twice , in both world wars.
Furthermore, modern subs ' ability to launch missiles, whether ballistic or even just SSMs/cruise missiles, would allow them to strike undetected from within enemy waters at targets of opportunity.Of course, not all the countries I named above have this ability, but some such as Israel do.