Qiqang-class area air defence ships
Until the retirement of the
Type-1975 class frigates in 2008, Nanhae had operated a mixed hi-low fleet capability. Initially, the two
Type-75's were the higher partners to the four Type-70's. With the introduction of the
Type-88's, these four ships became the high-end class to the
Type-75's. But with the latter's retirement in 2008, Nanhae's navy had shifted back to only a class of four major surface combatants, and had to rely on lighter corvettes and missile boats to fill any capability gap. Initially this was considered acceptable given the climate in the western Pacific.
However just ten short years later, that climate had changed. China's ambitious fleet building program and foreign policy was making Nanhae's policy makers jumpy. The far more interventionist bent of Russia, and its overt alliance with China, did nothing to assuage these concerns. While building had already commenced on Nanhae's replacement to the venerable
Type-88's, the resulting
Type-2018 class had been designed from the perspective of maintaining a smaller fleet and so was being considered insufficient in light of the changing climate.
In 2019, Nanhae began a program to develop an additional class of dedicated anti-air warfare ships to compliment and support the
Type-88's and their more general purpose capability. Nanhae's government, having already gotten permission to use a variant of the Aegis combat system for their
Type-18's, again approached the Americans to seek entry into the exclusive AN/SPY radar club. The logic was that Nanhae's navy being equipped with the full Aegis system would serve as the southern flank in the ROK/Japan/Nanhae chain stretching from the Yellow Sea to the Taiwan Straight.
With their approval, the design process settled on a design that shared several visual similarities with other Aegis-style ships, but carried over many of the elements of the Type-18 class being built. The class, currently referred to as the
Qiqang-class until a number designation is given, would represent the most modern and largest vessel built by Nanhae since WWII.
The biggest distinction was that Nanhae opted to use the AN/SPY-7 radar, also having been selected by Spain, Canada, and Japan for their vessels. These will be married to the NFCS radar series, in the form of four Mk2 fixed arrays, and two additional Mk1 arrays mounted for redundancy.
Their armament again reflect their size and status, carrying a 127mm/64 lightweight gun. 56 Mk41 VLS cells are carried, with 48-cells on the bow, and an 8-cell mounting aft dedicated for quad-packed ESSM missiles. 16 Marte-ER missiles are mounted a midships, along with a pair of twin torpedo launchers. A RIM-116 RAM launcher on the stern above the helicopter hangar provides the close-range self-defence capability for the class.
The first ship, named for Nanhae's first prime minister, was laid down in 2022. The second, named for the first post-war PM is intended to be laid down in 2023. Both ships are to be in service by 2027. An option for up to two additional ships is available under the shipbuilding agreement.
F-17
Zheng Qiqang (Under construction)
F-18
Kiso Hidetaka (Ordered)