China's Secret Weapon in the Invasion of Taiwan: RoRo Ferries

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  • čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
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    Roll-On Roll-Off ferries, RoRo is short, are commercial ships used by the Chinese military in its drill of the Invasion of Taiwan. Roll-On Roll-Off ships can become critical assets during an invasion of the island for two main reasons. First, they increase four folds the Chinese navy's sea-lift capability. Second, they blur the line of what is a war ship and what is a civilian ship, creating a tactical ambiguity that could make an invasion of Taiwan easier for China. In this video we analyze how RoRo ferries are essentially China's secret weapon in supporting a possible invasion of Taiwan and we will try to answer two major questions: What are the sea-lift and amphibious capabilities of these vessels? How could China benefit by blurring the line of what is a war ship and what is a civilian ship?
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    Table of content:
    00:00 The strange case of the Chinese ferry Zhong Hua Fu Xing
    01:19 2 Reasons of the Chinese Roll-On Roll-Off ferries' importance
    02:16 RoRo ferries sea-lift capabilities
    05:28 World of Warships
    06:46 what are the RoRo ferries built to military standards
    08:09 The importance of upgraded ramps for amphibious operations
    10:49 The Blurring of what is a war ship and what is a civilian ship
    11:41 Conclusion
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Komentáře • 2,1K

  • @Kamome163
    @Kamome163  Před rokem +50

    Play World of Warships here: wo.ws/3qd3TaA
    Thank you World of Warships for sponsoring this video.
    During registration, use the code POPEYE to get 500 Doublons, 1,500,000 Credits, 10 Days of Premium Account, and a choice of the ships Langley, Phoenix, Wyoming or Clemson after 15 battles.
    The promo code is only for new players who register for the first time on the Wargaming portal.

    • @pingpong7810
      @pingpong7810 Před rokem +4

      🉐🈴🈴🈴🈴tibet country

    • @noob.168
      @noob.168 Před rokem +1

      why did you laugh so much for this vid? was someone tickling you?

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před rokem +2

      @@noob.168 how did you know👀

    • @noob.168
      @noob.168 Před rokem +2

      @@Kamome163 winnie the...i mean xi jinping told me that he told you a roro your boat joke.

    • @Contractor48
      @Contractor48 Před rokem

      @@Kamome163where do you get your maps?

  • @hughn
    @hughn Před 11 měsíci +433

    In the UK during the 1960s to 1970s, Sealink Ferries was a nationalised ferry company equipped to support naval activities. They were fitted with all sorts of extra 'features', including de-gaussing coils.

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před 11 měsíci +38

      Thank you so much for sharing that Hugh!! Even during the Falklands war the UK used commercial ships in actual combat operations. IIRC the Atlantic conveyor moved the harriers on her deck!
      BTW What is a de-gaussing coil and what is it used for?

    • @BlackHearthguard
      @BlackHearthguard Před 11 měsíci +37

      @@Kamome163 Cancels the magnetic signature built up in a ship's hull to protect it from mines, etc.
      Edit: When you're talking about the Ro-Ro ramps, you say there's normally "one at the stern, and one at the aft of the ship"...

    • @hughn
      @hughn Před 11 měsíci +30

      @@Kamome163 De-gaussing coils are used to reduces the magnetic signature of a ship so they are less likely to detonate mines with magnetic fuzes. The formal military term is "STUFT" or Ships Taken Up From Trade.

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@hughn Hugh, thank you so much for explaining that!

    • @kevelliott
      @kevelliott Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@BlackHearthguard Also, (when will the world learn?) the plural of 'aircraft' is aircraft'.

  • @StoneCresent
    @StoneCresent Před 11 měsíci +543

    I am skeptical that the military/civilian ambiguity will bear any meaning once a war breaks out. If the ships of Chinese maritime militias do not distinguish themselves as military (especially during peacetime) and the CCP can impress vessels with little notice, then any Chinese flagged ship becomes a legitimate military target during war.

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Před 11 měsíci +108

      This is the case in war. All belligrent nation vessels (including cargo vessels) are legitimate military targets, unless marked with a Red Cross symbol. This happened in WW2 where Allies & Axis attacked each others merchant shipping.

    • @wiryantirta
      @wiryantirta Před 11 měsíci +40

      I personally think a free-for-all hunting season for every chinese vessel sounds fun.

    • @EthanX1ao
      @EthanX1ao Před 11 měsíci

      @@wiryantirta Free for all hunting for every American ship also sounds fun for the japs, until the US started building like a thousand aircraft carriers per year. Maybe go check the morden ship industry capabilities of some major countries first

    • @grandgao3984
      @grandgao3984 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Sounds like what Germany did in WW1 and WW2

    • @grandgao3984
      @grandgao3984 Před 11 měsíci +22

      ​@@wiryantirta Bro if China cease to exist, even without a fight, everything you buy would prob. be 20-100+% more expensive. They make the device you post with ya know

  • @Fr.Savage_McKiligan
    @Fr.Savage_McKiligan Před 11 měsíci +173

    RoRo ferries are very easy to sink. In the nautical world, they're nicknamed "roll-on, roll-over." They're highly susceptible to bad weather and load shifts, and it takes HOURS to lock down all the vehicles and cargo. While a few could make land and get combat vehicles to shore, a well-trained navy or coast guard pretty much guarantees that the threat from RoRo ferries is just about zero...
    Edit: Speaking to the legal ambiguity, we should remember that there are no rules in war, on victors. If I were a Taiwanese naval officer and my country was officially at war with China, I don't think a single CCP flagged ship would make it within 5 nautical miles of shore. Sort it out later, after the dust settles.

    • @DickCheneyXX
      @DickCheneyXX Před 11 měsíci

      I don't think they will fare well when a torpedo or a anti-ship missiles rams into them. More Chinese troops killed per missile is an advantage for Taiwan. Firing on "civilian" vessels in a non-issue during a hot war.

    • @ETS186
      @ETS186 Před 11 měsíci +11

      Exactly. And also, civilian or military can be argued is depending on the cargo it carries..simple really

    • @kingdomofthesaintful
      @kingdomofthesaintful Před 11 měsíci +6

      At that point (official war declaration) I think we're past the point any kind of deception being useful. This is, I think, for the escalation phase of the war, when things are ambiguous and there are still diplomatic talks happening (though in using these, probably not for long). As for the ease of sinking, I'll take you on your word for it. There's a lot of compromise that goes on to making a convincing decoy.

    • @BESWWBE
      @BESWWBE Před 11 měsíci +7

      What? I've served on the LHA-6, an amphibious warfare ship. it takes hours to chain down cargo and vehicles on these kinds of ships as well. your point is pointless.

    • @NoovGuyMC
      @NoovGuyMC Před 11 měsíci +6

      ​@@BESWWBE[disregard other points and came into conclusion that "your point is pointless]

  • @tj1435
    @tj1435 Před 11 měsíci +150

    Reminds me of how the S.S. United States (One of the fastest ships ever built) was also designed like a warship, free of wood fittings and near completely fire-proof. In order to be to be converted into a troop transport for an entire division in the case of WW3. Sadly, with the rise of airliners and fall of oceanliners we are near losing this engineering gem.

    • @palimpalim5291
      @palimpalim5291 Před 11 měsíci

      The United States was the fastest conventional big passenger ship ever built.
      She is merely a carcass now, the people need to let go.

    • @penultimateh766
      @penultimateh766 Před 11 měsíci +9

      Equally sadly, we no longer have polio, lynching, or the Soviet Union. Get some perspective...

    • @calvinnickel9995
      @calvinnickel9995 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Why do you need it.
      Even aircraft carriers. They are huge, slow, and vulnerable.
      The carrier has yet to face a willing and competent adversary in the era of nuclear attack submarines, air launched cruise missiles, and ballistic missiles.

    • @titanicbigship
      @titanicbigship Před 11 měsíci

      @@penultimateh766 fr

    • @penultimateh766
      @penultimateh766 Před 11 měsíci

      @@calvinnickel9995 Hey dork, that's because nearly ALL the carriers that EXIST belong to the US, and the US HAS no "competent" adversaries, least of all China.. As for cruise missiles", ever heard of "kamikazes"? Sure they're dangerous, but they're not bulletproof. Nor are subs, especially since we have more of them and better ASW systems. And a ballistic missile can't hit a moving target. In short, no, we don't expect zero casualties, we expect a WAR.

  • @eagol
    @eagol Před 11 měsíci +260

    The famous cruise ship QE2 also played just as vital a role in the Falklands War. Using her great size and speed, QE2 transported the main British land fighting force to the other end of the globe before the South Atlantic winter closed in, which would have made retaking the Falklands impossible. No big deal at all.

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před 11 měsíci +21

      Great point! And let's not forget the Atlantic conveyor carrying Harriers on her deck!

    • @rnbpl
      @rnbpl Před 11 měsíci

      Argies should have targeted civilian vessels. The Chinese won't make the same mistake!

    • @rnbpl
      @rnbpl Před 11 měsíci +42

      @@Kamome163 The Brits got in a lot of trouble during the falkland wars for using civilian airships for covert military purposes. I'm Uruguayan, we allowed teh British to use a Uruguayan hospital to treat their wounded under the condition that British planes landing in Uruguay were not allowed to carry weapons, but they got caught trying to do so anyway, squandering international humanitarian good will and even putting their own wounded at risk! Never again

    • @okisoba
      @okisoba Před 11 měsíci +11

      @@SunriseLAW He's saying the UK used civilian ships to supplement military ones also. It's a valid point and an example of when it happened in a real world scenario.

    • @okisoba
      @okisoba Před 11 měsíci +17

      @@SunriseLAW British lost 225 KIA. 2 destroyers sunk, 2 frigates sunk, 1 landing ship sunk, 1 landing craft sunk, 1 container ship sunk. 24 helicopters and 10 fighter jets were downed. Seems like the Argentinians were able to do a lot of damage with zero ability.

  • @JuanAmeritano-yj5xt
    @JuanAmeritano-yj5xt Před rokem +222

    I served on an amphibious USN ship. Getting across 100 miles of water is an extremely difficult operation. When you have zero experience in landing troops on a defended shore, all I can say is good luck with that. There are going to be many Chinese on the bottom of the Taiwan Strait. Yes, the roll on roll off can carry a lot. But that means there is a lot of open space which is not good for water tight integrity and damage control. So four more times of cargo means sinking one gives the defender more bang for the buck. One shoulder fired missile into the open innards of the ship would be disastrous. Vehicles will explode and a devastating inferno will fill the ships central bay. Will these civilian ships have trained damaged control teams. A non- military ship in a military sea engagement is a recipe for a lot of dead civilian seaman and all the troops on board. I hope the PLAN has lots of life vests and it's sailors and soldiers know how to swim. Add an unanticipated storm and it will be a complete disaster for the PLAN. We can only hope they aren't stupid enough to invade.

    • @CrasusC
      @CrasusC Před rokem

      Lol, as if China will actually attempt a landing.
      If the US is involved, China will just start a nuclear war straight away. The CCP would rather every human on Earth dies than letting Taiwan be independent, because CCP’s entire legitimacy and survival depends on the eventual recovery of Taiwan.

    • @adamc2378
      @adamc2378 Před rokem +39

      What kind of shoulder fired rocket can sink a ship by penetrating the hull AND the armored vehicles inside? Are we assuming the Chinese send these ships without naval or air escorts, or that they won't conduct shaping operations before sending them? Were you a senior officer in the navy, at least a O-5? Did you participate in the planning of a amphibious landing? When was the last time the US conducted such a landing? Unexpected storm, what is this 1274? 😂

    • @user-in5kc9eu8b
      @user-in5kc9eu8b Před rokem +18

      before this ships come. china's missiles have already destroyed all Taiwanese naval vessels, air force aircraft, and army coastal defenses

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před rokem +27

      Thank you so much for sharing your experience Juan! I totally agree with your points, those ships are not designed for combat operations and are pretty vulnerable. I think these ships could be useful in the first stages of an invasion when the fog of war is still up, you don’t know if that’s a ship carrying civilian or marines and its all just very blurry and confused. That being said, as you mentioned, amphibious operations are some of the most resource intensive and complex military activities there are, and China doesn’t have hands on experience on running one. But it’s always useful to know what’s boiling in the pot.

    • @vaakdemandante8772
      @vaakdemandante8772 Před rokem +19

      Let's calculate, China is able to build 1,5B / 0,03B = 50 of those ships for the cost 1 US ship, while having 4x the space on each of them, giving China shipping space of 200 : 1 when compared with the US Navy equivalent. I bet US can't lower this ratio enough with firepower to compensate and Chinese are certainly willing to lose even 50% of those ships during the assault. Chinese have a swarm mind and they design their military strategy likewise with big numbers in mind.
      Besides, I doubt there's going to be a hot war when it comes to Taiwan - the solution is most likely going to be diplomatic.

  • @lucasrichmond6074
    @lucasrichmond6074 Před 11 měsíci +14

    Great video! I work on a lot of PCC/ RoRo vessels for work (I unload and load them at my local port) be that they are a dofferent style ship, it is the exact same concept. Funnily enough, at around 3:10 when all the trailers and rendered in to look like a human has parked them... kinda looks inaccurate hahaha. You would be suprised how accurately cars etc. are parked, both when we receive them from asia etc. and when we load them ourselves. This is because you have to be pretty strict to fit as much as you can in. Sometimes when getting a vessel to unload, it looks scary unreal how perfectly straight the rows are, its wild!
    Just cars get parked with one spotter lining you up perfectly, let alone trailers and larger vehicles which would include 3 or more spotters at times each!
    Just a funny little quirk, and finally somewhere I could share a tiny spec of information of something I have up close experience with.

  • @alanfenick1103
    @alanfenick1103 Před 11 měsíci +45

    You did not mention that the US Navy’s San Antonio Class has accommodations for marines, a 124 bed hospital, mess facilities and repair facilities and support for landing a assualt brigade along with self air defense. It has facilities for the Osprey V-22, helicopters and so much more.

    • @tmike_tc
      @tmike_tc Před 6 měsíci +2

      Not to mention, decades of USN naval warfare experience, etc.

  • @tommyd154
    @tommyd154 Před rokem +153

    As a US merchant sailor who's been getting increasingly more interested in maritime intel and that sort of stuff, especially after sailing around the SCS/ECS and the Western Pacific - this is a great video, nice work man.
    Never really thought of retrofitting Ro-Ro's to launch AAVs at sea, definitely an interesting concept and I'm curious to see if it would actually be a viable strategy if things kick off.

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před rokem +14

      Hey Tom! Super cool profile pic and great videos! You just got one more subscriber! 🤩
      Thank you so much, yeah I was also surprised when I saw the pictures of AAV being launched from commercial RoRo. If you scroll down in the video description you can find the sources I used for my research and there are a few which provide actual satellite images of RoRo involved in amphibious exercises. If you scroll a even bit more down you find the link to our secret Discord where you’re more than welcome to join! 😉

    • @simroysten7963
      @simroysten7963 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Obviously, you have not heard of "Club K" cruise missiles on innocent looking ship containers with antenna and controlled by settlelite. Of Russian origin and used by PLA.

    • @dixonhill1108
      @dixonhill1108 Před 11 měsíci +1

      I'd be much much more worried about a cargo carrier. You could literally put a 100,000 people on one with ease.

    • @tommyd154
      @tommyd154 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@simroysten7963 I actually just started seeing posts about Klub-K today - another interesting gray area strategy for the PLAN for sure.
      I don't think we have anything similar currently. I do remember some proposals about putting remote-operated VLS cells aboard T-AKE class auxiliary/logistics ships but as far as I know nothing ever came of that as it would change their non-combatant status.

    • @tommyd154
      @tommyd154 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Kamome163 thanks hahah I'll take a look!

  • @roberthaines4221
    @roberthaines4221 Před 11 měsíci +9

    02:36 - "These ships are equipped with multiple access ramps, usually with one at the stern and one at the aft of the ship."
    uh . . . the "stern" means the back end of the ship. "Aft" means . . . towards the back end of the ship. So . . .

    • @PhilJonesIII
      @PhilJonesIII Před 11 měsíci

      And very solid infrastructure to load/offload.

  • @THypher1
    @THypher1 Před 11 měsíci +76

    As a merchant navy sailor (deck officer cadet), on my previous ship we encountered many Chinese fishing boats in the Indian Ocean some as far as South of Madagascar. They have been hoovering up the world's oceans for years. Their incredibly bright lights were clearly distinguishable from around 30 nautical miles away through my binoculars on my night time navigational watches, and illuminated the night sky like the Moon. We also had to steer around them at times given fishing boats often congregate where ships often go (we weren't in any TSS/shipping lanes at the time either).
    With regards to the Ro-Ro ferries being used like this, it is an interesting development but not all that surprising either given some Ro-Ro ferries are already under military charter around the world such as most of the Point Class Ro-Ro ferries here in the UK. The line between civilian shipping and military shipping also being blurred in previous conflicts, including with the likes of the so called "unrestricted" submarine warfare during WW2 where only hospital ships and ships of neutral countries were illegal to target given their clear identification as either (as remains the case today).
    Also, as already mentioned large, high speed civilian ships (usually ocean liners) have made the key difference to past conflicts such as Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth shortening WW2 with their troopship work alone, including Queen Mary still holding the record for the most people carried by any ship ever of over 16,000 troops on one voyage and as already mentioned QE2 (a ship I grew up sailing on as a child passenger) transporting a large number of our troops south to the Falklands including most of the Gurkhas who the Argentines were terrified of.
    However, it should be noted that some of these ocean liners were built with military use in mind (for example, Mauretania and Lusitania being designed as Armed Merchant Cruisers in event of war with reinforced areas on deck for mounting naval guns) and/or with government subsidies that enabled their construction in the first place with at least troop ship use in mind in a time of need (SS United States being yet another example). Some of these ocean liners also only stayed in service due to government subsidies (SS United States being an example of this too). Furthermore some of these ocean liners (usually the largest and fastest of their time) were the nation's "ship's of state" being the best that nation could create so usually lending themselves, in this way alone, to serving their respective nations in time of war with propaganda and morale components also coming into play.
    Finally, I doubt today's cruise ships will be involved in the same manner in a future conflict given they are not built with military use in mind at all, and given the nature of warfare has changed even since 1982, not to mention the ownership of today's cruise ships is not as straightforward, let alone the registries of these ships - making requisitioning them more complicated at the very least.

    • @steveeddy6876
      @steveeddy6876 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Thanks for the update the Chinese are trying to be sneaky but the Tiawaneese are ketching on!

    • @steveeddy6876
      @steveeddy6876 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Yes the big Beautiful Queen Mary was,used for some troop transport in WW2 I toured it years ago in Long Beach CA

    • @steinbauge4591
      @steinbauge4591 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@steveeddy6876 the Taiwanese also know that their economy depends on the mainland - and increasingly they are aware of facts like that in the US wargame for Taiwan it says that if China does not destroy industry/infrastructure the US will. And they don't really fancy becoming another Ukraine

    • @tommyfred6180
      @tommyfred6180 Před 11 měsíci +3

      even back in the Punic wars between Rome and Carthage civilian ships got requisitioned. your right this ro-ro thing is nothing new.

    • @aphidian
      @aphidian Před 11 měsíci +4

      PLA Navy also operate their own "cruise ships" which were designed to keep up with carrier groups and house ~3000 personnel for prolonged period. It was previously used for crew rotation during carrier training (so they could train 3-4 sets of crew with 1 training carrier), but could certainly be used as troop transport if the need arise, and take a lot more than 3000 if the trip is short.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daguan-class_troopship

  • @jameswang9257
    @jameswang9257 Před 11 měsíci +23

    As a Taiwanese, I really appreciate whoever make this video possible!

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před 11 měsíci +6

      Thank you so much! It means so much! 🥹 these are the comments that remind us why we love the community❤️. BTW I think we will probably print it out

    • @user-jh1ex4if8w
      @user-jh1ex4if8w Před 11 měsíci +4

      老乡 我是中国大陆的 希望台湾尽快回到祖国怀抱。

    • @GTFO_0
      @GTFO_0 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@Kamome163World knows when america desperately cries for democracy and freedoom of that country or region what will happen to that region take for example afaganostan,iraq,Libiay😂😂😂Even usa has never said taiwan is a country but the amount pf poeple supporting it really is a shock😂😂Bro they are like in civil war that never ended ..Sayinh china is gonna invade taiwan is like asuimg usa will overthrow and overkill hawaians kings and their ruler to setup their Own form of government wheather people want it or not

    • @cinqbuns
      @cinqbuns Před 2 měsíci +1

      its always good for your image to appreciate the people that made war and occupied india, invaded falklands, invaded china to occupy and sell opium, you know, all that stuff that is written in history.
      they care about you bro, trust them.

  • @liam3326
    @liam3326 Před rokem +57

    Super high quality videos! Love to see it.

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před rokem +6

      Thank you so much, Liam! 🥹

  • @JoelCorrente
    @JoelCorrente Před rokem +148

    They also have a distinct sound signature which undoubtedly is in US/Taiwanese sonar libraries. Those ships would be HVT for sub surface assets.

    • @user-gc1hg9sp9k
      @user-gc1hg9sp9k Před rokem +27

      Taiwan strait are pretty much too shallow for submarine operation, and you have to know that this ship would be in convoy and escorted by multiple destroyer

    • @JoelCorrente
      @JoelCorrente Před rokem +14

      Those transports would be traveling from destinations outside the strait as he showcases in the beginning of the video. Shallow water does complicate things as well but its not preventive and Taiwanese subs would be in the strait regardless.

    • @user-gc1hg9sp9k
      @user-gc1hg9sp9k Před rokem +8

      The problem is taiwanese sub are too few and outdated, they only have four conventional diesel sub and two of them are from ww2 era submarine, so their submarine capability isnt that great

    • @olderchin1558
      @olderchin1558 Před rokem +12

      @@JoelCorrente You are being too optimistic. Subs operating in shallow water don't stand a chance against air surveillance, destroyers and corvettes. What will be worse is China will definitely mine the access to the Straits on both sides. And these RORO will be used after Taiwanese defences have been destroyed. And it would be too easy to put a couple of HQ17 air defences system on the RORO, even if I don't think it would be necessary with China's air and sea dominance over the straits.

    • @ivancho5854
      @ivancho5854 Před rokem +3

      ​@@user-gc1hg9sp9kAre submarines really required to launch torpedoes or could they be launched from the shore?

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    • @AllisonSherman7
      @AllisonSherman7 Před 11 měsíci

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      @@Kurt5Dobson

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      @Kurt5Dobson Před 11 měsíci +1

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      @@AllisonSherman7

    • @cristinagutierrezmoore8302
      @cristinagutierrezmoore8302 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@AllisonSherman7 I just googled *Robin Brezik* and i contacted her through her website, i must confess, she is really good and i must thank you.

  • @Phil0rd
    @Phil0rd Před 11 měsíci +15

    While animating maps from different perspective is cool, may I suggest you for the most part keep it in a roughly ‘up is north’ orientation? Alternative perspectives just takes a few seconds for one to understand what’s going on and the thought process is a bit distracting from the main content.

  • @hilestoby2628
    @hilestoby2628 Před rokem +10

    Love your work as usual Kamome. Love the 3D graphics and animations.

  • @TheLiamster
    @TheLiamster Před rokem +31

    These ships would be sunk by missiles and torpedoes so quickly

    • @spade1974
      @spade1974 Před rokem

      in event of war with taiwan,china PLA` will be protecting these roros with submarines,drones,corvettes,missile boats, coast guards vessels,anti submarines helicopters,attack helicopters and fighter jets

    • @ItsJoKeZ
      @ItsJoKeZ Před rokem +7

      like most reds- it is more about numbers than protecting the people who make up the numbers. so the benefit is carry weight and numbers without building exp. military assists- at the massive loss of any protection.

    • @vaakdemandante8772
      @vaakdemandante8772 Před rokem

      @@ItsJoKeZ true. It's so American to think that lives of the soldiers is of any concern to the Chinese generals. All they care for is the objective to be reached and if it takes a toll on the soldiers and machinery to achieve that goal than that is an acceptable solution. In war quantity often turns into quality.

    • @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022
      @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 Před rokem +1

      As stated in the video, these ships don't need to sail into active conflict zones to be useful. They can relieve pressure on warships that might have had to transport units out of theater. They can exert pressure simply by existing.
      And again, as stated in the video, let's say war starts and this ship is sailing 100kms from Taiwan. Should Taiwan shoot? What if it was all civilians? You may say it's ambigious and "deserved to get shot at" or whatever, but it'll be terrible optics and optics is hella important to a small country that needs international assistance.

    • @MyBelch
      @MyBelch Před rokem

      @@chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 Don't forget, Taiwanese people are Chinese. They don't give a F just like Mainland Chinese don't give a F. It's only the Western snowflakes that stand around wringing their hands and biting their nails about killing a few civilians. Taiwan will sink anything in the strait.

  • @defooster2757
    @defooster2757 Před 11 měsíci

    Love the effort into the visuals as always!!

  • @sirdewd2197
    @sirdewd2197 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Not sure if anyone has said this yet, but your graphics and visuals are soo damn nice! Idk how you do it but it looks so professional!

  • @JustAnNPC69
    @JustAnNPC69 Před rokem +5

    Your Maps are amazing as usual.

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před rokem +1

      Thank you so much!!! It takes quite sometime to make them and I’m so happy to hear that❤️

  • @ichimonjiguy
    @ichimonjiguy Před rokem +7

    Those ships are slow moving, high value targets. One "Quick Sink" bomb dropped by F-16 can break such a ship to two halves.

    • @kentershackle1329
      @kentershackle1329 Před 11 měsíci

      unless its a drone, it aint hard to convert ya know (Opps , no conversion needed ).. ships are auto pilots most of the time..ya just keyin Way Points.. and it'll steer it self LoL. and ya just wasted ya SINK BOMB and most probably ya precious F16 too

    • @ichimonjiguy
      @ichimonjiguy Před 11 měsíci

      @@kentershackle1329 probably

    • @johnmackenzie3871
      @johnmackenzie3871 Před 11 měsíci

      Which F16 will be around to do that?

  • @louisastuto2878
    @louisastuto2878 Před 11 měsíci +8

    There is no way there would be any confusion or ambiguity about these ships’ purpose if war did break out. Taiwan would be fighting for it’s very existence and the existence of everyone on the island, any ship of this size sailing in their direction would be fair game immediately. They are not gonna wait around asking for every ship to identify itself, if you know the Chinese could use this tactic, believe me the Taiwanese also do.

  • @steveeddy6876
    @steveeddy6876 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for the update great video 👍

  • @hoosierplowboy5299
    @hoosierplowboy5299 Před rokem +17

    Not only will China use the ferries, they will utilize hundreds of fishing vessels.

    • @thebaddest7841
      @thebaddest7841 Před rokem +1

      China accounts for half the worlds fishing activity. We’re talking tens of thousands if they wanted to

    • @pathat8869
      @pathat8869 Před rokem

      Yeah but they will only use their maritime militia and coast guard once the bombardment was conducted

  • @m19petersen
    @m19petersen Před rokem +9

    I love these videos so much.

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před rokem +3

      Thank you so much, Mark! I really appreciate that 🥹

  • @kassenz
    @kassenz Před 11 měsíci

    Very nice job in this video! Thank you!
    Graphics are excellent
    And journalism too

  • @delondestan8961
    @delondestan8961 Před 8 měsíci

    very interesting video, thank you !

  • @headoverheels88
    @headoverheels88 Před rokem +6

    So they made floating coffins?

  • @robertzendejas8349
    @robertzendejas8349 Před rokem +3

    The Chinese fishing fleet?
    Aww man, the mental image of Taiwanese frigates just mowing over those junks is comedy gold.

  • @comradeblin256
    @comradeblin256 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Ita actually a brilliant idea. Forget silly folks thinking about "misidentification, disguise as civilian bla bla" this ship will work as ferry, racking cash in peacetime and transport at wartime. Capable of being deployed in numbers without the PAIN of losing cash during peacetime. True show of Chinese attrition preparation and business mentality!

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před 11 měsíci +2

      💯pretty smart if you ask me!

    • @jonathanwilliams1065
      @jonathanwilliams1065 Před 11 měsíci

      Being disguised as civilians is also as brilliant as it is evil
      Nothing less should be expected from the communists

  • @EthanReadsHisBooks
    @EthanReadsHisBooks Před 9 měsíci

    nice work

  • @socket_error1000
    @socket_error1000 Před rokem +112

    Any ship carrying troops into a battlefield would be a legitimate target even if it is flagged as a civilian ship. In fact disguising military ships as civilian ships can be considered a war crime as it puts actual civilian ships at risk of being targets. That said I could see China mixing in actual civilian ships full of actual innocent civilians who would be rerouted into the theatre of battle once the operation started. This would also be a war crime but make it more difficult for the defenders. Especially if they load part of the top decks where vehicles are visible with civilian vehicles to disguise them from visual identification.
    That said, cruise and anti-ship missiles would make short work of these, especially if they are full of munitions and fueled vehicles, and could be targeted to individual ships tracked from ports where they were loaded. Keep in mind they would not be the vanguard of any attack despite the offshore unloading capability because they would be a sitting duck for shore batteries and even mobile artillery responding to the landing area. Taiwan has F-35s and other capable fighters and will easily be able to maintain at least a tactical advantage in the sky and allow attacks on any ships attempting to unload troops offshore. Unless they planned on unloading 20+ miles out to sea, it would be ineffective.
    The idea that they would be able to approach unnoticed and effect a surprise landing is also unlikely as the use of spy satellites and the very real use of sympathetic ground based observers (spys). These assets would be able to identify the loading of a large amount of military vehicles and personnel onto them long before they ever left port. Even staging for such an action would take weeks of preparation (if not more) and give Taiwanese defense forces plenty of time to prepare. Then there is the mining of any port approaches, denying the use of them. Add the overwhelming capabilities of the US Rapid Dragon Launch System and only a small percentage of these would ever be able to unload their troops. Then once onshore they would still have to fight through a heavily motivated, western armed and trained resistance force while most of their own reinforcements and logistical supplies are being destroyed before ever making it to the island. If most of these ferries are lost in the initial wave, as I suspect they will be because even the empty ones leaving will be targeted, then China will have no way to do this again, making mount a second attack impossible if this one stalls or fails outright.

    • @seraphimworms899
      @seraphimworms899 Před 11 měsíci +11

      So you mean, PLAN and PLAAF all drink cup'o coffee and watch these ships struggle on the sea? I can fully understand that Americans imagine what the war would be looks like sinking a somali pirates boat.

    • @socket_error1000
      @socket_error1000 Před 11 měsíci

      @@seraphimworms899 Ah, yes, the PLAN and PLAAF...they are very scary are they not? We hear a lot about all their big scary new toys that will put the USA on the back foot but the reality is all their technology is basically stolen tech from Russia. Evben their hypersonic missiles they threaten the USN's CAs with can be easily neutralized by taking out their guidance satellites. Their own new big carrier is sitting in at dock with a crack in the hull so big it looks like the rear end of the ship is going to fall off. PLAN does not have a true blue water navy and the PLAF has a limited number of stealth capable fighters (and that is being kind).
      Let's be real here, how many battles has the PLA actually fought, outside of those against its own people or immediate neighbors? I will even let you count the war with clubs in the Himalayas against India...
      You make it sound like the PLAN has been out on the ocean fighting naval battles day and night. Who have they fought?
      The USN actually has run wartime operations with its assets, most notably the carrier task forces.
      The USA has been honing it warfighting edge every year for the last 30+ years fighting real battles.
      The only way the PLA gets a beachhead is through a total surprise attack and without any response from the USA. It isn't going to happen. The USA already has multiple bases in the Philippines and at least one other island east of Taiwan, outside China's reach, so threats against the Carrier fleet are moot.
      China will be fighting Taiwan, the USA, Japan, S.Korea, the Philippines, Vietnam, and Australia. All nations that China has threatened, bullied, stolen from, and infringed upon their territory and all of them have sworn to defend Taiwan if China tries to invade it. It is also likely that India takes the opportunity to lash out and retake their territory in the Himalayas while it is distracted with this debacle it created.

    • @bjornholmsen8694
      @bjornholmsen8694 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Taiwan does not have F35. They do have F16, Patriots, and Harpoon missiles though. Civilian ships could be used for a surprise attack and there are ways to disguise a troop build-up.

    • @socket_error1000
      @socket_error1000 Před 11 měsíci +10

      @@bjornholmsen8694 Correct, they do not have the F-35s, but there are plenty pledged to the defense of the island from Japan, S.Korea, and the multiple US bases nearby. Although they were seeking to buy the JASM cruise missiles and those would be very effective and a lot cheaper than the F-35s if they were to get their hands on them.
      You can disguise a small troop buildup but it takes hundreds of thousands to invade an island like Taiwan and just the logistics companies alone getting ready to deploy would set off alarm bells around the world and give weeks of warning. This is not 1945, the USA has full satellite coverage of the region that can see and monitor all of these troop movements. And just like with other hostile nations, the USA watches China all the time.

    • @bjornholmsen8694
      @bjornholmsen8694 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@socket_error1000 We shall see ;)

  • @tonysu8860
    @tonysu8860 Před rokem +23

    Interesting.
    A year ago I looked into dual purpose ro ro cargo ships and only one was identified. Ocean going ferries could be an adaptable vessel, too but I wonder if conversion and operation would really that simple to execute an amphibious landing without all sorts of things going wrong. And, of course even if seaworthy it would take somewhere in the neighborhood of 4 hours to traverse the strait in ideal weather conditions, maybe a bit longer with a very full load. Possibly for the last hour approaching the island, the ships could be under heavy attack from all types of wwepons from shoulder fired AT missiles like the Javelin to ordinary artillery firing ordinary or maybe even guided shells and everything else you can imagine. The point is that an amphibious ship can be stopped right up to maybe 20 feet (maybe more) of the water's edge and the landing would be considered a failure.
    You'd also have to wonder how reliable or operational an improvised ramp like what was described in this video would work in a real world scenario. Something like a modified ramp would be something I'd want designed to the high standards of the US, and would be jittery about China's design standards. But, who knows? Maybe Chinese invading troups could get lucky and not experience any problem.

    • @JuanAmeritano-yj5xt
      @JuanAmeritano-yj5xt Před rokem +4

      Excellent, you gave a realistic view of the immense difficulties of any amphibious operation. Anyone who has visited Omaha Beach, would know that one crew of Germans in a very strong bunker wreaked havoc on the US landing force with an anti-tank weapon. The Taiwanese manufacture many of the most sophisticated microchips in the world which causes me to ask what else they might have manufactured. The two hundred plus mountain peaks over 3,000 meters are stronger than any weapons in the Chinese arsenal including nuclear. The old adage about not underestimating your enemy applies in every military confrontation. The US military landed unopposed in Okinawa and then suffered immense loses from a well protected Japanese Army. And then there were the Kamikaze! The Japanese Navy never expected to get stopped by destroyer escorts and PT boats against their battle force of capital ships. The Japanese regiment that attacked the Marines on Guadalcanal never anticipated the heroic actions of Medal of Honor recipient Sgt. John Basilone. The Germans obliterated much of Stalingrad but in the end they failed to achieve the objective. One never knows what unforeseen event will unravel the best laid plans. Midway Island should have been a easy victory on paper, but in turned into a tide turning defeat. You just never know.

    • @wangyaohan8824
      @wangyaohan8824 Před rokem

      very uneducated to think today is 1945. china will never send any ship before sending thousands missiles to disable any defense system the island have.

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před rokem +1

      Great point there. I agree those ships don’t stand a chance in actual combat situations but could still be useful in sealift operations and in launching and recovering AAVs. On the ramps there’s an article which I used for the research of this video that goes more into details on it jamestown.org/program/ramping-the-strait-quick-and-dirty-solutions-to-boost-amphibious-lift/

    • @kentershackle1329
      @kentershackle1329 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Jittery abt CHINA DESIGN STANDARD?. LoL.. China shipbuilding is at if not at leading edge of shipbuilding mate. International Classification Soceity makes sure of it. Chinese built ships are all sailinf over the world .

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@kentershackle1329 You’re right about that and we didn’t question it in the video. The main focus related to shipbuilding is on the military standards which specific vessels have to be built with.

  • @Cherb123456
    @Cherb123456 Před 11 měsíci

    Interesting, thank you!

  • @BengalLancer
    @BengalLancer Před rokem +7

    I'm trying to understand, no one else have counted these commercial ships?.. I mean in military they always use civilian logistical assets so why Chinese civilian logistical assets such as commercial airliners and ships were not considered as potential military equipments?

    • @cxzact9204
      @cxzact9204 Před rokem +2

      It *is* considered a possible military asset - as the video says, Taiwanese forces track their movements. I'm sure the Japanese, Koreans and Americans do too. US sub surface warfare capability is still leaps and bounds ahead of the rest.

    • @ragabara1031
      @ragabara1031 Před rokem +2

      I don't understand why this has been highlighted as some sort of devious and extraordinary practice, because it's not. Commercial vessels designed to military specifications have been around since WWI. China requiring registered ROROs to follow standard specifications is just the latest evolution in merchant naval capabilities.
      The video doesn't provide adequate context on merchant navies and why they became practical in wartime, nor does it explain why China can incorporate ROROs into their military sealift capacity.
      If you think about it, such capabilities provided by merchant navies are only possible when a nation maintains the linkage between its civil and military industries, has a strong manufacturing sector, and achieves near vertical integration of its supply chain. Very few nations today can claim these three characteristics, and China is one of them.
      The media hubbub behind this development shows a disconnect in Western narratives. On the one hand they push the idea that the Chinese took Western jobs which resulted in unemployment, poverty, and increased crime rates across the West. On the other they push the idea that the Chinese people are not overall living better lives than they were 20 years ago, that all the numbers and academic reports coming out of China tracking its enormous improvement in living standards and poverty alleviation are false. Then comes in the news that Chinese commercial RORO ferries are not only being co-opted for military use, but that they are being *designed* for military use.
      You can't have your cake and eat it too. Either China has the wide array of civilian industries and prowess which indicate advanced infrastructure and well-educated citizens, or they haven't outcompeted Western labour on cost and efficiency.

    • @tonysu8860
      @tonysu8860 Před rokem +1

      Ordinarily, commercial ships don't support offloading to the ground like beaches. Ro ro ships ordinarily offload and onload to a dock. Ships that aren't ro ro need cranes to offload or onload. That's why ro ro ships might be considered usable to support resupply to a captured port but not as part of an amphibious landing to a beach. Apparently the Chinese are attempting to modify some of their ocean going ferries to offload to a beach.

    • @BengalLancer
      @BengalLancer Před rokem +1

      ​@@tonysu8860when you were using commercial assets unit you do need lots of support activities such as ground servicing for aircrafts in a proper airport or dock facilities for commercial ships. Military assets are meant to secure those airports and docks in the first place so that in the later supply runs where larger number of logistical transport assets are required The military vehicles do not become too strained. Heck , UK won the Falklands war with proper utilizing marchant navy for supply chain. We often see c5s and C-17 transporting American soldiers but what we do not see is Pan am (desert Storm reference) airliners also doing the same thing, called civil reserve air fleet CRAF.

    • @gheeaikang9256
      @gheeaikang9256 Před rokem

      @@cxzact9204 l

  • @George.Andrews.
    @George.Andrews. Před 11 měsíci +3

    It's good they have two ramps , one at the stern and one aft. If they put another at the back, it would be invincible.

  • @mySDK3333
    @mySDK3333 Před 11 měsíci +1

    The part I don’t understand is the main focus for this ship is to send ground troops, but I don’t think they can just go to any port and do so.

  • @jeffdege4786
    @jeffdege4786 Před 11 měsíci

    The USN operates non-military ships for logistics and supply.
    Including special-purpose ships like the USNS Montford Point T-ESD-1 - an Expeditionary Transfer Dock. Which can tie up to a RORO ship at sea, so vehicles can driven off of and straight on to an Air Cushion Landing Craft.
    RORO ships can transfer vehicles only onto a hard pier, and one only in a deep water port.
    ESDs allow cargo to be offloaded at sea and delivered to any place where land meets sea at a modest gradient, across water, sand, marsh, gravel, etc.

  • @Shadowgunner785
    @Shadowgunner785 Před rokem +6

    Out of all of the things I could have thought about for how china would send troops and equipment to Taiwan, the last thing on my mind was Civilian Transport boats (which probably should have not been the case) it's honestly mind boggling to think that china is actually making a ton of these boats to prepare for such an invasion of Taiwan. But then it's important to remember that china subscribes to a doctrine known as Unrestricted warfare which means that anything can be used as a weapon for the CCP. China's fishing fleets that sail around the world as well as cause disruptions in the South China Sea are a good example of this.
    Great video as always Kamome, love how you brought up such an unspoken tool that china is preparing to use for future warfare. And I can't wait for you to make a video on Latin America!!!! I think that and Africa are the only two places you haven't talked about yet so I'm desperately waiting for one of them 🤞.

    • @user-gc1hg9sp9k
      @user-gc1hg9sp9k Před rokem +5

      You basically forgot that civillian merchant fleet are play important rule in combat in ww2, So ita not a suprise that china will use roro ship for their amphibious landing

    • @JenGM24
      @JenGM24 Před rokem +1

      That's easily solved, If it moves shoot it.

    • @paulsteaven
      @paulsteaven Před rokem +2

      ​@@user-gc1hg9sp9k Just to add, the Royal Navy also used merchant ships during the Falklands War. Even the Coalition Force led by US duting the Gulf War also used a lot of Merchant ships.

    • @bjornholmsen8694
      @bjornholmsen8694 Před 11 měsíci

      This is no news. It was widely reported in. 2015 that they would convert civilian ships into military ships. Six categories of ships were mentioned.

  • @HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle

    This is the only time I have seen a YT channel address this issue. Attacks submarines will have to get these.

    • @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022
      @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 Před rokem +2

      Taiwan Strait is relatively shallow, thus not the best area for attack submarines. This is part of many reasons why CCP wants Taiwan, you can buil submarine bases with deep af access to oceans on the eastern side of Taiwan.

    • @kentershackle1329
      @kentershackle1329 Před 11 měsíci

      How many torpedoes does an attack subs carry ?

    • @HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle
      @HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle Před 11 měsíci

      @@kentershackle1329 I do not know.

  • @mmakey4310
    @mmakey4310 Před 11 měsíci

    Thankyou for revealing the secret weapon on youtube!

  • @julwiezdeghorz5089
    @julwiezdeghorz5089 Před 11 měsíci

    Very informative video. 😊👍

  • @ernestimken6969
    @ernestimken6969 Před rokem +4

    When did the PLN ever go by international rules?

    • @pathat8869
      @pathat8869 Před rokem

      What no? China has militarized these civilian ships for transporting and supplying its troops. These are dual use ships meaning they can function as either commercial or military ships. Shipping goods or shipping weapons.

    • @user-gc1hg9sp9k
      @user-gc1hg9sp9k Před rokem

      Using civillian vehicle for military purpose isn't illegal

    • @wangyaohan8824
      @wangyaohan8824 Před rokem

      international rules made by US, and US even didn't sign to follow those rules?

  • @tolpacourt
    @tolpacourt Před 11 měsíci +23

    Amphibious landings on Taiwan are extremely difficult. Taiwan has few beaches, and they are heavily fortified. The coast is rocky and steep in most places. China would need to defeat these coastal defenses _before_ they could land troops on beaches amphibiously.

    • @freedomisnotnegotiable
      @freedomisnotnegotiable Před 11 měsíci

      It’s an island, they will simply block it and within weeks you’ll see how live will change in Taiwan no reason to land on it until they get invited from the large Population that is already Pro China (see last local elections)… Taiwan is nothing with China, that’s why it is also part of China whether you or your warmongering caretaker in Washington like it… you caretakers are probably not allowing to do your own research but common sense should tell you that Taiwan can only loose.

    • @liam4688
      @liam4688 Před 11 měsíci

      And it's not like the Taiwanese are gonna let those ferries approach Taiwan cost peacefully, they'll be traveling through hell fire

    • @Aamirmhmd99
      @Aamirmhmd99 Před 8 měsíci

      All defense installations in Taiwan would be hit with missiles and drones in a saturation strategy especially near the landing zones. Then a naval blockade would be enforced. Only then an amphibious landing would commence. This ain't Normandy bruh.

    • @andrewj9831
      @andrewj9831 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Aamirmhmd99 If they blockade Taiwan, then all that will happen is Chinese ships will be blockaded elsewhere.

  • @christopherwinter6911
    @christopherwinter6911 Před 11 měsíci

    great video, definitely interesting,

  • @blackmamba3427
    @blackmamba3427 Před 11 měsíci

    Awesome video ❤

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před 11 měsíci

      Thank you so much Black Mamba!♥️

  • @brianfoley4328
    @brianfoley4328 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Ro-Ro still need some level of "finished" landing point. They are not capable of launching amphibious vehicles while at sea. I like the "off-handed" manner the narrator describes making the 3-4 hour transit across the Straight (particularly if it's contested). Having a Ro-Ro capable vessel is important for the logistical follow on...but first the PLA/PLAN will have to seize and secure a viable port facility.

    • @anticarrrot
      @anticarrrot Před 11 měsíci

      Or bring a port facility with them, as was done at Normandy.
      If a land AND air beachead is established, the RoRos could be offloaded by cargo amphibs. Drive a dozen vehicles onboard, throw load within the relative safety of the dry cargo bay, and then send them back. The ballasting operation would be complicated thorugh, and the air beachhead would have to be of considerable given the ranges of modern and near future ASMs.
      It's one of those 'theoretically could, probably shouldn't in practice' situations.
      Much like china's invasion of Taiwan.

    • @brianfoley4328
      @brianfoley4328 Před 11 měsíci

      @@anticarrrot I hate to break it to you but what you're suggesting can't be done. Ro-Ro can not "off load" to another vessel afloat for basically the same reasons they can't launch amphibious vehicles. Secondly, the "Mulberry" was constructed after a successful amphibious landing. The Chinese don't have the amphibious lift capacity to get enough troops to shore to conduct an amphibious landing. Everything about the Normandy Landings would have been a disaster if attempted today against even a moderately armed opponent. Any discussion of a PLA/PLAN/PLAAF assault on Taiwan is merely in the long term planning stage...maybe three to five years away. Keep in mind that Germany had no naval or air presence at Normandy and that the allies not only had a 10:1 numerical advantage in troops but had uncontested air superiority as well as a extremely experienced Navy conducting the landings...also the allies had the opportunity to "practice" multiple times at North Africa, Sicily and Italy...to work out the kinks before attempting Normandy.....so Nope, it ain't happening anytime soon.

    • @anticarrrot
      @anticarrrot Před 11 měsíci

      @brianfoley4328 Dude, look up the meaning of 'if'.
      RoRos built to mil spec, as these ones allegedly are, absolutely could be built for deployment/recovery at sea, depending on the extent of the modifications. Frankly the biggest difference between vehicle deck and well deck is the intention of the design team and door width.
      I agree the idea is very silly, but saying it can't be done, as opposed it shouldn't be done, is equally silly.

    • @brianfoley4328
      @brianfoley4328 Před 11 měsíci

      @@anticarrrot I suspect you don't know much about R0-Ro, and that's okay, but "mil spec" or not...Ro-Ro are not set up to transfer ship-to-ship at sea and they are definitely not set up to off load amphibious vehicles while underway.

  • @chcgo2undaground
    @chcgo2undaground Před rokem +4

    PRC's use of ro-lo ferries for military transport has been studied previously...their use in military exercises has been reported on, so no news here....the Taiwan ports possible use in a China invasion is already noted....

  • @nixxonnor
    @nixxonnor Před 11 měsíci

    Interesting analysis

  • @heliotarrara
    @heliotarrara Před 11 měsíci +2

    That's also a lot of supplies to lose at once considering it's such an easy target.

  • @arailway8809
    @arailway8809 Před 11 měsíci +10

    Thank you for covering RO/RO ships as an instrument of war.
    I consider them second wave transports.
    First wave would be one way container ships that could dump millions
    of tons onto an unsuspecting shore.

    • @hypersonichobo4263
      @hypersonichobo4263 Před 11 měsíci +3

      And Taiwan isn't just sinking them from 100km out...why?

    • @Edin116
      @Edin116 Před 11 měsíci

      Don't forget their militarized fishing trawlers designed for ramming and sinking other ships that essentially have small-arm proof hulls and can drop off 50+ infantry each, having several hundreds to a couple thousand available, while Taiwan doesn't even have 1000 missiles capable of engaging ships and suddenly the PRC can drop 50k+ infantry on the first wave if they want to commit to beach-ramming these ships ashore.

    • @NadeemAhmed-nv2br
      @NadeemAhmed-nv2br Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@hypersonichobo4263 because 100 km is exactly how far the mainland is I'm sending a missile directly to the mainland would activate it's missile defense system which has more missile capacity than the rest of the world combined not to mention the fact that they use in training enough missiles that puts the rest of the world supply to shame annually

    • @pierrepracht
      @pierrepracht Před 11 měsíci

      @@NadeemAhmed-nv2br Sauf qu'il faut diviser ces chiffres par 3 : corruption communiste classique....
      Plus d'apparences (et de trolls) que de réelles capacités.

    • @Ealsante
      @Ealsante Před 11 měsíci

      @@NadeemAhmed-nv2br If they're already invading, there's no choice but to hit them anyway. What are they gonna do, nuke you? Invade you?

  • @nieljosephpalca7849
    @nieljosephpalca7849 Před rokem +46

    That's why it important for Taiwan to develop/build numerous indigenous torpedoes and coastal subs (160 tons) for coastal defense. Imagine a single 160 tons coastal sub armed with 2 pre-loaded heavyweight torpedoes sunk a transport ship loaded with troops, equipments, and vehicles. Plus the affordability of coastal subs made them ideal for mass production. Although coastal sub may not as capable to a standard sub but still it can sink/cripple any surface assets as long as it is armed with torpedoes and necessary sensors.

    • @tonysu8860
      @tonysu8860 Před rokem +7

      Unless the sub is very small, it itself would be detected easily in the shallow waters of the Strait. And, small also means fewer weapons carrie. Although subs might play a role, the majority of defense can't be submarine, it'd have to be land and air.

    • @ivancho5854
      @ivancho5854 Před rokem

      Could shore launch torpedoes be an option?

    • @nieljosephpalca7849
      @nieljosephpalca7849 Před rokem +4

      @@tonysu8860 Anti-submarine warfare in coastal/littoral waters in not that easy to perform. Coastal subs normally operate in littoral/ coastal waters where other coastal defense platforms are ready to compliment and support them. In other words, it is not easy to conduct ASW operation in shallow to very shallow waters due to the presence of land based ashm, kamikaze drones, layered ground based air defense, naval mines and etc. Yah, it is given that coastal can only be armed with atleast 2 heavy torpedoes but the affordability makes them ideal for in large numbers. Quantity has its own quality. Lets be realistic, coastal subs are far more survivable and lethal compared to any Taiwans surface combatants. Nobody in any nation navy will dare to conduct amphibious operation in coastal/littoral water protected by numerous coastal submarines and other coastal defense platforms.

    • @nieljosephpalca7849
      @nieljosephpalca7849 Před rokem +1

      @@ivancho5854 No for anti-shipping but for anti-sub is yes.

    • @nieljosephpalca7849
      @nieljosephpalca7849 Před rokem

      @@ivancho5854 No for anti-shipping but for anti-sub is yes.

  • @rinsedpie
    @rinsedpie Před 11 měsíci

    Nifty digital artwork there; also the contents are very interesting

  • @jeffwilson568
    @jeffwilson568 Před 11 měsíci

    The US has RoRo for moving equipment and plan on more to replace old sealift command, there are numerous high speed cats the Navy has that are currently used as civilian ferries now…. ie Maine to Nova Scotia, a couple in Hawaii….. to be used for a beach landing seems to be putting them into a vulnerable state…. So it could be a test just to see the feasibility of moving equipment to shore in a area under control already

  • @ItsJoKeZ
    @ItsJoKeZ Před rokem +3

    I think taiwan would be open and able to strike at any ships moving from CHINA to TAIWAN during an invasion or strike in any form.

  • @gamewarrior010
    @gamewarrior010 Před 11 měsíci +5

    These ships are nicknamed roll on roll overs for a reason. They could be useful but they are going to need plenty of escorts.

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Totally agree, or operate in relatively not contested maritime and air conditions

    • @derrickfoster644
      @derrickfoster644 Před 11 měsíci +2

      My first thought too. Ro-ro ferries have a tendency to capsize even when hostile nations aren't firing missles or torpedo at them. I can't imagine it would take much to sink them.

    • @bellgrand
      @bellgrand Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@derrickfoster644 They can just use their coastal guns. If they could hit heavy tanks with one in WW2, a Cold War or more modern variant can make short work of a ro-ro ferry.

  • @jacobzindel987
    @jacobzindel987 Před 11 měsíci

    Very interesting video.

  • @daviddavid5880
    @daviddavid5880 Před 11 měsíci +1

    There's probably a dozen monster container ships from the PRC regularly docking in Taiwan.

  • @almerindaromeira8352
    @almerindaromeira8352 Před 11 měsíci +5

    RoRo ships are deathtraps. Most of the major incidents at sea in the recent past involve such ferries. They don't have enough bulkheads so damage spreads really easily.

    • @bellgrand
      @bellgrand Před 11 měsíci +2

      This. Guns can easily sink these ships. Don't even need missiles.

    • @volairn70
      @volairn70 Před 11 měsíci +1

      And that doesn't even account for the heavy lifting they would be doing in the military capacity. AFVs, tanks, supplies, all of that weighs a lot more than passenger cars and travellers with some commercial trucks thrown in. They are dangerous enough without being shot at by any weapon system.

    • @oldgreg315
      @oldgreg315 Před 11 měsíci +1

      You guys missed the point. The fact that it's a 'civilian' ship means it's a huge political risk to declare open season on them. (Not saying they won't or they shouldn't). Imagine for example that China ensured that even a few - preferably the first few - were actually carrying civilians. The resulting hesitation gives them an initial advantage.

    • @user-gc1hg9sp9k
      @user-gc1hg9sp9k Před 11 měsíci

      The main task of the roro ship are only transporting supply and equipment,not combat. And its operate behind enemy lines and with the escort of another warship like destroyer or frigate.
      in the wartime this roro ship are probably will be upgraded with anti air system like a s400 or ciws

    • @reggiesilvestre4646
      @reggiesilvestre4646 Před 11 měsíci

      @@oldgreg315 exactly. theres gotta be some rules of war that says you can't hide as a civiliam, not that the CCP would follow them anyways

  • @HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle

    Next @Kamome163 should address the issue of container ships hiding DF-21 launchers inside cargo containers. They will also be used in a hypothetical invasion.

  • @philandrawis6232
    @philandrawis6232 Před 11 měsíci

    acoustical mines can do a number on them with good programming and pre-acoustic data info they can be placed several miles to ports and just kept there in waiting to take them out and sink them with all their cargo yes the soldiers can escape but their weapons armor and fule are gone even if they captured the port by areal assault the ship will never make it in

  • @theopinionatedbystander
    @theopinionatedbystander Před 11 měsíci

    Very interesting

  • @BosonCollider
    @BosonCollider Před 11 měsíci +9

    Those can be taken out fairly easily by unmanned surface naval vehicles though. You don't need torpedoes, subs, or missiles to take them out if they are used offensively, they are vulnerable to asymmetric warfare and need a good escort

    • @protorhinocerator142
      @protorhinocerator142 Před 11 měsíci +2

      This whole concept presupposes that Taiwan will just sit there doing nothing while 1000 RoRo ships are mysteriously headed their way for the first time ever, with radio silence.
      You'd need to be as dumb as that wrestler where Bugs Bunny hands him a big slingshot and then pulls back on it and grabs a boulder, loads it into the slingshot, and then lets it go right into your face. That's pretty stupid.

    • @Lancaster604
      @Lancaster604 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Most modern warships even frigates and destroyers can be destroyed with a single antiship missile. See HMS Sheffield of farmland war. The way modern warships are built, they rely on not being hit.

    • @Lancaster604
      @Lancaster604 Před 11 měsíci

      Falklands

    • @protorhinocerator142
      @protorhinocerator142 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Lancaster604 Sink, sank, sunk.

    • @Aamirmhmd99
      @Aamirmhmd99 Před 8 měsíci +2

      All defense installations in Taiwan would be hit with missiles and drones in a saturation strategy especially near the landing zones. Then a naval blockade would be enforced. Only then will an amphibious landing commence under naval defence cover. This ain't Normandy bruh. There will be immense recon and surveillance.

  • @Spamtrap2011
    @Spamtrap2011 Před 11 měsíci +17

    The problem is that Taiwan has f3w beaches suitable for landing armies and I suspect that the current occupants of Taiwan may do their best to discourage such activities.

    • @sanriosonderweg
      @sanriosonderweg Před 11 měsíci +1

      @Art Vogt hopefully they are smart enough to have learned the lesson of Ukraine, don't get spent as America's puppet.

    • @BosonCollider
      @BosonCollider Před 11 měsíci

      @@sanriosonderweg You mean Russia's meat grinder? But yes, Ukraine should never have given in to pressure to give away they nuclear weapons regardless of how much Clinton insisted. When you have aggressive neighbours nukes seem to be a requirement for neutrality

    • @eduardoborges506
      @eduardoborges506 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@sanriosonderweg Get spent as a russian puppet? What do you even mean

    • @batboy555
      @batboy555 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Those beaches have long been mined and artillery presighted.

    • @Spamtrap2011
      @Spamtrap2011 Před 11 měsíci

      @@batboy555 Precisely. Taiwan has been preparing for an invasion for decades.

  • @hatac
    @hatac Před 11 měsíci

    A good answer to a comment I made on an earlier video. They don't have enough combat sea lift capacity. I suspect these will be engaged and sunk in large numbers in a fight.

  • @Willys-Wagon
    @Willys-Wagon Před 11 měsíci

    The closest landing route is slightly further than Normandy, and the PLAN does not have complete air and sea control over Taiwan straits as the Royal Airforce and Navy did. As a thought experiment I wouldn't mind watching a piece on Chinese take on Mulberry Habour. If I remembered correctly the allies never managed to bring Cherbourg fully online and it wasn't til the capture of Antwerp did they secure a deep water port.

  • @ItsJoKeZ
    @ItsJoKeZ Před rokem +6

    after seeing the literal cracks in the newer PLAN aircraft carriers as well as the lack of actual use of real mil. assets- I assume these paper boats will get absolutely shredded by even basic munitions.

  • @bestestusername
    @bestestusername Před 11 měsíci +3

    This is common knowledge for quite a long time, its been common knowledge that China would need civilian ships to get enough gear and people in a short time to a particular place. Its not hard for a government with such total control of everything to build ships for civilian use until needed by the army. Australia even integrated a civilian large catermaran in our East Timor operation back in 1999, not hard to do.

    • @peanut0brain
      @peanut0brain Před 11 měsíci

      What did u do in east Timor? Help kill 1M+ people because of oil? So proud of your east Timor operation?

    • @raumfahreturschutze
      @raumfahreturschutze Před 11 měsíci

      @@peanut0brain WEST BAD

    • @bestestusername
      @bestestusername Před 11 měsíci

      @@peanut0brain clap clap

    • @bestestusername
      @bestestusername Před 11 měsíci

      @@peanut0brain Timor only has a population of around 1.4 million, there is gas in the sea between our countries and they asked us to come and help with Indonesian militia. Your attitude is the result of a poor communist education and ignorance . Its ok though as normal commentators on videos regarding china always attract silly trolls.

  • @bitmaster-781
    @bitmaster-781 Před 11 měsíci +1

    C: Our secret weapon, is a transport ship that looks like a commercial ship.
    Also C: Training amphibious assault using the secret ship.
    Also C: 100s transport ship that turns off the transponder and moves to port. They won't dare to attack.
    T: 🙄 Attack.😮‍💨

  • @Nicklan1961
    @Nicklan1961 Před 11 měsíci

    Beautiful big targets hard to miss

  • @BangBangBang.
    @BangBangBang. Před 11 měsíci +6

    I can confirm the RoRo ramps used by the Chinese pointed out in the video is very similar to ones used by US military (Military Sealift Command) boats in the Bobo-class style of ships

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Thank you for sharing that. Do you think those ramps too could be used for amphibious ops?

    • @stephendaley266
      @stephendaley266 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Yes and no. US ships definitely have this capability, but we have fewer of them. We can definitely perform that function, but nowhere near the scale of a full-on Amphibious invasion like D-Day in WW2.
      Hard truth is this: China can outbuild the US with all types of naval vessels.
      Chinese ships may be of lower quality, but sometimes, sheer quantity has a quality of its own.

    • @baddbabylon
      @baddbabylon Před 11 měsíci

      @stephendaley266 buddy, do some research; that hard truth is objectively false. 😂

  • @jefff1932
    @jefff1932 Před 11 měsíci +19

    An interesting fact: Both Taiwan's and China's constitutions state that the land consists of the mainland and the island of Taiwan. Therefore, legally, the two regimes belong to the same country. Just because of the civil war split into two regimes, no international treaty defines Taiwan as an independent country. This is just a legacy of the Chinese Civil War, and this civil war has not signed any armistice agreement from 1946 to now. In other words, the two sides of the strait are still in a state of war, only a ceasefire.

    • @FilippoGuarda
      @FilippoGuarda Před 11 měsíci +4

      Let's hope for the annexation of Continental Taiwan to the island government

    • @MuffHam
      @MuffHam Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@FilippoGuarda Do you really think a tiny Island of 40ish million can take down the mainland of 1.5 billion. Grow up. Taiwan will fall.

    • @ameritoast5174
      @ameritoast5174 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@MuffHam Its only a matter of time until West Taiwan joins the island of Taiwan.

    • @MuffHam
      @MuffHam Před 11 měsíci

      @@ameritoast5174 Keep dreaming. China will take Tawian. It's simple reality.

    • @biz6361
      @biz6361 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@ameritoast5174 LOL this made my day

  • @ronc7743
    @ronc7743 Před 11 měsíci

    "Ramps at the stern and ramps at the aft!" Lol!

  • @kellandgriffin57
    @kellandgriffin57 Před 11 měsíci

    At around 2:42, you mention ramps at both the "stern and the aft of the ship", these mean the same thing, should be bow and stern or fore and aft

  • @bmxrider8188
    @bmxrider8188 Před rokem +4

    Do a video about the fishing fleet and the integration of military abilities

    • @pathat8869
      @pathat8869 Před 11 měsíci +2

      The chinese maritime militia and coast guard will likely play a part in the amphibious invasion of taiwan, they will likely help in transporting the army amphibious units to taiwan which would allow the chinese navy to stay east of taiwan and delay foreign intervention.

  • @DawnFox-kb1xq
    @DawnFox-kb1xq Před 11 měsíci +16

    A RoRo Ferry would be just an unidentified blip on the radar screen, so in case of 'issues' would be an instant target, so can you imagine the effect of an anti-ship missile hitting one of these sitting ducks? Slava Tiawan.

    • @jont2576
      @jont2576 Před 11 měsíci

      that would give China a good excuse to declare war on Taiwan no?it would at the very least give China justification to attack and annex a couple of ports and territory in taiwan.....like crimea or the golan heights.
      In fact why not hijack a couple of Air china jetliners and crash it into Shang hai world trade center or something?
      Slava China,Russia,Brics and all the other countries in Africa, south america, middle east and parts of asia.....

    • @Donnirononon
      @Donnirononon Před 11 měsíci +7

      Cringe bro

    • @FrostbiteDigital
      @FrostbiteDigital Před 11 měsíci

      Slava Taiwan? Really dude? Christ man you should stay on reddit, keep that type of cringe there. (You didn't even spell Taiwan properly lol)

    • @jonathanpusar5931
      @jonathanpusar5931 Před 11 měsíci +1

      This is a horrible idea with massive loss of life….there’s no way if China undertook this they just wouldn’t be sending tens of thousands of both civilians and their own military to die.
      I don’t want to ‘slavo’ anyone. If China does truly on their own accord try to invade Taiwan that’s one thing…but wishing for such an encounter that would likely escalate into outright world war (and likely nuclear war) is suicide.
      We truly live in a dark timeline where so many have been brainwashed at this point to want war and believe that any government and country has our best interests at heart…

    • @Drak976
      @Drak976 Před 11 měsíci

      @@jonathanpusar5931 Almost all of them have somehow decided that either Communist nukes don't work or like my Dad that we'll just magically shoot them all down when not 2 months ago when that balloon was floating around the military admitted we don't have one single active missile group in the country. Woopsie daisy. The AEGIS though amazing has to be in the right spot and has only had limited tests. There will be hundreds of missiles with a dozen warheads each my Dad thinks 90%+ would get stopped though. I don't. Remember that drone at the start of the war that malfunctioned and then crashed in NATO territory when it finally ran out of gas? There was no radar to spot that. When the Ukrainians flew to Moscow and droned it there was no defense system to help them. MAD is still real.
      Look at the Russian ship it was an AA ship and it got pwned by 2 missiles. I'm sures ours is better bla bla but how much better?

  • @MultiTomcat67
    @MultiTomcat67 Před 11 měsíci

    Tracking the Ro Ro ships can be good practice (simulated) for those who would blow them out of the water.

  • @davidclark3304
    @davidclark3304 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Minor detail: The "stern" and the "aft" are the same thing. I think you mean the bow.

  • @tedthesailor172
    @tedthesailor172 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Ferries don't arrive out of the blue. They have specific crossing schedules and timetables. An unscheduled ferry entering territorial waters can be interrogated by radio and if explanations are suspicious, intercepted and boarded. Any sustained resistance would give the game away...

  • @SabinStargem
    @SabinStargem Před 11 měsíci +13

    Hypothetically, it might be possible to detect a militarized RoRo ferry according to the cargo it is carrying. Presumably, a ship full of tanks and personnel would have a different sonar signature to one with solid boxes of packed cargo with a skeleton crew.

    • @hypersonichobo4263
      @hypersonichobo4263 Před 11 měsíci +7

      Or just the fact that it's being surrounded by military ships and cruising straight for Taiwan.

    • @SabinStargem
      @SabinStargem Před 11 měsíci +1

      Why straight at Taiwan? China could try to time the weekly transport of "domestic" cargos on night-time paths that follows their coastal waters, and only make a turn towards Taiwan at a time that is suitable.
      What I am saying is that China is likely to use subterfuge and weather conditions to increase the odds of successfully penetrating Taiwan.
      Being able to spot out of place activities will be key to preventing Chinese aggression from bearing fruit.

    • @hypersonichobo4263
      @hypersonichobo4263 Před 11 měsíci

      @@SabinStargem no single ferry can carry 1/100th the military force needed to conquer Taiwan. Any amount of ferries massing is automatically suspicious. And the fact is that if China isn't incredibly stupid, and they aren't, they will need military escort, which is itself a complete giveaway.

    • @NortyNige
      @NortyNige Před 11 měsíci +4

      It's fairly cost effective to lay a great many sea mines which listen for certain ships. The acoustic signature given out by props and hull shape / speed is quite specific. These mines now weigh a couple of tons so the damage done is enough to break a ships back in certain depth of water.
      If China pushes it will be in a world of hurt that will take decades to fix.

    • @timdunn2257
      @timdunn2257 Před 11 měsíci

      Tanks are heavy - maybe 51 tons. I doubt that a civilian ship could carry them. Ships are built as lightly as possible.

  • @bluedragontoybash2463
    @bluedragontoybash2463 Před 11 měsíci

    Du'h Roro Ferry is basically a landing ship. I imagine myself as in battle tank everytime I disembark from Roro Ferry 😀

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před 11 měsíci

      Totally understand that feeling!😂

  • @neild3074
    @neild3074 Před 11 měsíci

    Nice bullseye target right in the middle of the "Ferry".

  • @DontUputThatEvilOnMe
    @DontUputThatEvilOnMe Před rokem +3

    Guys just imagine if d-day had to happen with no air superiority or naval superiority and where the English Channel was in fact 4 times wider. It would be a slaughter. RoRo vessels aren’t normally used until the beach is captured anyways.

    • @Kamome163
      @Kamome163  Před rokem

      Mostly agree but wouldn’t it be more fair to say that China has the upper hand in terms of air superiority over the Strait at this moment?

    • @DontUputThatEvilOnMe
      @DontUputThatEvilOnMe Před rokem +3

      @@Kamome163 Not really, its nowhere close to the air superiority the Allies enjoyed in ww2 during d-day. If you factor the USN and US Air Force in Okinawa and potentially the Japanese and Australian air forces they do not.

    • @user-gc1hg9sp9k
      @user-gc1hg9sp9k Před rokem

      @@DontUputThatEvilOnMe i pretty much doubt that US and it's allies will join the war againts china, Even Ukraine war itself NATO are not join the war againt russia and they choose to support ukraine with weapon, training, and intellegence.
      If NATO not even dare to join Ukraine war againts russia, why do you think that they will join war againts china? beside war with china will cost far more than Ukraine war both of material and human cost. even a single ship lost will result hundred of live and billion of dollar of equipment lost

    • @icebaby6714
      @icebaby6714 Před rokem

      Unlike the D-Day in Normandy, China has hundreds of fighter jets, and warships, thousands of missiles, hundreds of thousands of drones...most likely it will use missiles to destroy all the military targets, airfields and ports before landing.

    • @icebaby6714
      @icebaby6714 Před rokem +2

      @@DontUputThatEvilOnMe China has already taken consideration of possible US intervention, that is why China didn't invade Taiwan until today. China will send its carriers to the east and the north of Taiwan to counter the US navy and air force while the PLA invades Taiwan. China has DF missiles that could sink US carriers and kill 5000 soldiers on board, so called 'Air carrier Killers', without the carriers, the US fighter jets have to fly all the way from Guam, Saipan or the airbases in Southern Japan, Chinese missiles (nick named "Guam Express" and "Saipan Express" will destroy the US bases in Guam and Saipan if the US force gets involved.

  • @rush1er
    @rush1er Před 11 měsíci +3

    The real advantage of a Ferry boat is that once 5 miles off shore the casino tables and slots can now operate which is signaled when the patio deck calypso band starts playing "Luck be a Lady". Also be sure to check out the new international buffet complete with carving station, tutti fruiti smoothie bar and tri-colored chocolate fountain (always a hit w/the kids)

  • @markmoreno7295
    @markmoreno7295 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Target just the front and rear door, not to sink, but to render inoperable. It is back to their main port for repair. Likewise their screw (or rudder) could be targeted making an at sea rescue needed by a coincidentally nearby American vessel. How handy! And what is wrong with autonomous drone subs that have a magnetic drill?

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Před 11 měsíci

      RoRo's are highly vulnerable to sinking if the doors are damaged, allowing seawater to enter...

  • @kurtdowney1489
    @kurtdowney1489 Před 11 měsíci

    Excellent video very interesting and the comment section is loaded with information.

  • @zohan90210
    @zohan90210 Před rokem +3

    so they are giant piñatas compared to other countries landing craft, got it. also the laws of war that protect civilians do not apply when a country uses what would have been civilian equipment.

  • @Native_Creation
    @Native_Creation Před 11 měsíci +4

    It's believed when the Lusitania was sunk, it was being used for wartime purposes in shipping ammunition.

  • @olddog103
    @olddog103 Před 11 měsíci

    They also have heavily modified CAR CARRIERS set up for massive barracks ans resupply ships

  • @jjnxyz4368
    @jjnxyz4368 Před 11 měsíci

    You would still need a berth at a port that isn't within range of mortar fire to use on of these ferries, doubt that would ever happen.

  • @lostinpa-dadenduro7555
    @lostinpa-dadenduro7555 Před rokem +3

    That’s what Scooby Doo says when there’s a problem. Ro Ro.

  • @KTo288
    @KTo288 Před 11 měsíci +4

    This is pretty much expected, most countries in this region including Indonesia, Japan Korea et al have wartime contingencies to use ferries to move troops. One give away is many have more installed horse power than is strictly needed for commercial activities. And that this contingency will only be a surprise to Americans. No other country in the world is rich enough and have the need enough to maintain a large sealift capability.
    If ever the UK finds itself in need of moving large numbers of troops, such as moving our Army to reinforce NATO in Germany we would need to impress the entire cross channel Ro-Ro fleet to do so. Our name for this is STUFT (Ships Taken Up Frome Trade) because we're basically stuffed if we need to put this into action.
    One thing we learned, relearned, is to differentiate between amphibious assault and amphibious transport. The assault ships should have the systems (most importantly the invisible electronic warfare ones) to defend itself. Ro-Ros have a place in supporting an already successful landing, but no place in the initial stages of a landing.

  • @kennethbolton951
    @kennethbolton951 Před 11 měsíci

    Pshaw, great big floating death trap.

  • @stanleywang7367
    @stanleywang7367 Před 11 měsíci

    Is it feasible that many of the mandated changes also have civilian benefits/ are viable safety improvements?
    Kind of like how highway construction was justified both for civilian and military reasons?

  • @maoskeylu894
    @maoskeylu894 Před 11 měsíci +4

    The British Navy also used civilian ships to transport military assets during the Battle of the Falklands

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 Před 11 měsíci

      The Falklands also had no naval and air defenses worth speaking of.

    • @pedrokantor3997
      @pedrokantor3997 Před 11 měsíci

      @Yora21 Yet they still sank British ships.

  • @othgmark1
    @othgmark1 Před rokem +7

    They are very large and will most likely be destroyed before they get to open water.

    • @CMaldonado1690
      @CMaldonado1690 Před rokem +4

      China will not attempt attacking Taiwan unless it controls the strait, negating access to the US. The USN still has the upper hand, but China for sure is working to close the gap.

    • @nickolashogg259
      @nickolashogg259 Před rokem

      @@CMaldonado1690The Chinese navy has more ships however they are mostly small coastal patrol boats. This will allow them to take the strait until the full USN arrives.

  • @Mike-gz4xn
    @Mike-gz4xn Před 11 měsíci

    Very good idea and huge capacity.

  • @koharumi1
    @koharumi1 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Sounds like these would be good for the backlines not inital invasion though.