Near-collision with PLA ship caused by 鈥榣anguage barriers鈥
Chinese inexperience and communication difficulties on both sides contributed to a near-collision between the USS Cowpens and a Chinese warship in the South China Sea last month, according to the head of US forces in the Asia-Pacific.
Admiral Samuel Locklear, head of US Pacific Command, told a Navy conference that the Cowpens, a guided missile cruiser, was monitoring the Liaoning, China’s first aircraft carrier, as it conducted operations in international waters for the first time when the incident occurred.
The Cowpens was approached on December 5 by a Chinese warship that maneuvered in front of it at a distance of about 500 meters, forcing the US vessel to take evasive action to avoid a collision, US defense officials claimed.
“I believe that there was ... a lack of experience on some of their smaller ships and I think we have to understand that for now,” Locklear told the Surface Navy Association during a question and answer session at its national symposium.
“Our COs, they operate globally. They know how to manage across numerous scenarios. ... Our PLA counterparts are just starting to do this,” he said.
Language barriers were also a factor, Locklear said, with US sailors hailing the Chinese ship in English and the Chinese having to address the Americans in sometimes limited English.
Locklear said the US Navy had taken a “hard look” at what triggered the incident and communicated frankly with the Chinese about it. Each side understands the other’s viewpoint, he said.
“The bottom line is to make sure that all parties of the world understand that we operate freely in international waters and that we will act professionally, and that we’ll act respectfully and not in a dangerous way unless necessary and we expect that of other navies as well,” Locklear said.
The Pacific Command chief said China’s recent test of a hypersonic missile was a demonstration of Beijing’s ability to rapidly roll out new technologies.
“They’re better at that than we are. They get to it faster. Of course they have different processes that allow them to get to it faster,” he said.
Locklear said he was not particularly concerned about the Chinese test. But with many countries working on hypersonic systems, the technology would inevitably proliferate and confront the US Navy at some place in the world, he said.
Locklear said it was important to encourage China to “come into the security environment as a productive member.”
“China is going to rise. We’ve all known this for a long time,” he said.
“That’s yet to play out. But the goal, the PaCom (Pacific Command) goal, my goal, is for China to eventually be a net provider of security and not a net user of security.”
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