, a
Royal Navy Type 45 guided missile destroyer Advanced navies, with access to
surveillance satellites and large-scale submarine detection systems, can rarely be surprised at sea, but cannot be everywhere. Individual ships of advanced navies can be vulnerable at sea (e.g., the hit by an
Iraqi aircraft-delivered anti-ship missile while patrolling the
Persian Gulf) or in port (e.g., by the
suicide attack on the .) "
Blue-water" naval capability means that a fleet is able to operate on the "
high seas." While traditionally a distinction was made between the coastal
brown-water navy, operating in the
littoral zone to 200 nautical miles (370 km), and a seagoing blue-water navy, a new term, "
green-water navy," has been created by the U.S. Navy, which refers to the coastal submarines and fast attack boats of many nations, the larger littoral combat corvettes and similar vessels of a substantial number of powers, and amphibious vessels ranging from elderly
LSTs to complex S/VTOL carriers and other specialized ships. In modern warfare blue-water navy implies self-contained force protection from sub-surface, surface and airborne threats and a sustainable logistic reach, allowing a persistent presence at range. In some maritime environments such a defence is given by natural obstacles, such as the
Arctic ice shelf. The
US Navy studied a concept for an economically priced ship capable of surface and subsurface sea control with ASW helicopters and STOVL fighters for light air defense but not large enough to be well suited to power projection known as a
Sea Control Ship. This small aircraft carrier was not built by the US although a long deck
Amphibious assault ship equipped with STOVL fighters and ASW helicopters instead of its primary transport helicopters is operating in a secondary sea control role.
Requirements for modern sea control During the
Falklands War, the British lacked long-range
Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS), which led to ship losses and major damage to others, when the
Argentinian attack aircraft came into the view of ship radar at approximately the same time they would fire antiship missiles, and only a short time before they made bombing attacks. A number of navies have learned this lesson. Many navies with
STOVL carriers have developed helicopter-mounted AWACS like the British and Spanish
Westland Sea King AEW, Italian
EH-101 AEW, and the Russian
Ka-31 AEW helicopter. Recently the French with a new larger CATOBAR
aircraft carrier obtained the US
E-2 Hawkeye AWACS aircraft. An example for the difference between a blue-water navy and a green-water navy: "...The first should be a 'green-water active defense' that would enable the
People's Liberation Army Navy to protect
China's territorial waters and enforce its sovereignty claims in the
Taiwan Strait and the
South China Sea. The second phase would be to develop a blue-water navy capable of projecting power into the western Pacific . . . Liu [commander in chief of the PLAN 1982-88 and vice chairman of the
Central Military Commission 1989-97] believed that in order to fulfill a blue-water capability, the PLAN had to obtain aircraft carriers . . ." Yet although the
Royal Thai Navy operates a sea-going carrier, the RTN is not absolutely a "blue-water navy."
Countermeasures to imposed command While a
blue-water navy can project sea control power into another nation's littoral, it remains susceptible to threats from less capable forces. Sustainment and logistics at range yield high costs and there may be a saturation advantage over a deployed force through the use of land-based air or
surface-to-surface missile assets (whether on terrain-following or ballistic trajectories),
diesel-electric submarines, or asymmetric tactics such as Fast Inshore Attack Craft. An example of this vulnerability was the October 2000
USS Cole bombing in
Aden. In response to these threats, the U.S. Navy has developed the
Littoral Combat Ship (LCS). ==See also==