![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/security/ (Inside the Ring - Bill
Gertz) New China fighter A Chinese general is boasting that the People's Liberation Army Air Force will soon fly a new advanced fighter that U.S. intelligence projections had said would not be ready for 10 years. The new fifth- generation Chinese fighter could be deployed as early as 2017 -- years earlier than announced by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates in explaining his cancellation of the U.S. version of the fifth- generation fighter, the F-22. Gen. Ho Weirong, the deputy commander of the Chinese air force, told Chinese state-run media on Monday that China's fifth-generation fighter has been under intense development and will enter service in the next eight to 10 years. Characteristics of this type of jet include radar-evading stealth, supersonic cruise, super maneuverability and the capability for short takeoffs. The comments by the Chinese general represent an unusual disclosure by the Chinese military, which rarely mentions future weapons systems. The disclosure will likely fuel further debate in the United States over the F-22, which was canceled in favor of the F-35 by Mr. Gates earlier this year. Mr. Gates said in a speech to the Economic Club of Chicago July 16 that the F-22 was canceled as part of considerations for the proper mix of warplanes needed for a potential of "state-to-state conflict." The F-35, despite development problems, was chosen over the F-22 for cost reasons, but he noted that it was "clearly a capability that we do need." Mr. Gates stated in the speech that the F-22 was not needed because China's air force would not have a comparable jet by 2020. "Consider that by 2020, the United States is projected to have nearly 2,500 manned combat aircraft of all kinds," he said. "Of those, nearly 1,100 will be the most advanced fifth-generation F-35s and F-22s. China, by contrast, is projected to have no fifth-generation aircraft by 2020. And by 2025, the gap only widens." As a result, the United States would have about 1,700 advanced fifth- generation fighters "versus a handful of comparable aircraft for the Chinese. Nonetheless, some portray this scenario as a dire threat to America's national security," Mr. Gates said. A Pentagon spokesman did not reply to e-mails or telephone calls seeking comment on the issue. A Defense Intelligence Agency spokesman also did not respond to e-mails. Richard Fisher, a China military-affairs specialist, said the reports on a Chinese advanced fighter reflected "unprecedented transparency" by China. "One has to assume they have some confidence in their projections in order to make them public," said Mr. Fisher, of the International Assessment and Strategy Center. "So what is the Obama administration going to do, ignore this and proceed with F-22 production termination, to the detriment of U.S. security interests in Asia and beyond?" According to defense specialists, the F-35 is comparable in some ways to the F-22 but lacks what is called "supercruise" capability, a feature that enables it to penetrate deep into enemy airspace, launch its weapons and exit without using up all its fuel. Mr. Fisher said he thinks that canceling F-22 production without a better warplane in the pipeline is tantamount to unilateral disarmament. "In Asia, this means a decline in American military credibility and an increase in regional instability," he said. Mr. Fisher also called on U.S. intelligence agencies to explain "what appears to be a significant underestimation of Chinese capability." "The PLA does not make it easy to read their future, but after spending $40 billion a year on intelligence, it would be a real scandal if they got this one wrong," he said. DIA on China's new fighter The Defense Intelligence Agency is sticking by its estimates of when China will deploy a fifth-generation jet fighter after recent remarks by a Chinese general that Beijing's most advanced jet could be fielded by 2017 - years earlier than U.S. intelligence projections. "We believe that first flight of a Chinese fifth-generation fighter will occur in the next few years; however, we also believe it will take about 10 years before the [People's Liberation Army] begins to operationally deploy a fifth-generation fighter in meaningful numbers," DIA spokesman Donald Black told Inside the Ring. As reported in this space last week, Gen. He Weirong, the deputy commander of the Chinese air force, told Chinese state-run media that the new advanced jet would fly soon despite U.S. intelligence projections that it will not be ready for combat for at least 10 years. (Gen. He was incorrectly identified as Gen. Ho Weirong last week.) Gen. He said the first jet could be deployed by 2017, and his remarks have sparked renewed debate over whether to continue production of the Pentagon's most advanced jet, the F-22. Production of the jet, beyond 187 more planes already in the pipeline, was effectively canceled by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates earlier this year. If deployed by 2017, the new advanced warplane would make China's jet force more advanced than those of Britain, France and other Western European statesaccording to military analysts. Asked if U.S. projections about the new Chinese jet were incorrect, Mr. Black said "the intelligence community has been warning of the development of a Chinese fifth-generation fighter for several years." "Intelligence estimates typically provide a range of dates associated with operational deployment," he said. "Gen. He's comments are generally consistent with these intelligence community estimates of Chinese fifth-generation fighter operational deployment." The United States is deploying large numbers of F-35 jets, which lack some fifth-generation capabilities of the F-22, such as supercruise, a propulsion system that allows the jet to fly longer distances, fire its long-range weapons, and then exit without running out of fuel. Mr. Gates said in July that U.S. projections of when China would deploy its new fifth-generation jet, dubbed J-XX by some analysts, indicate that the F-22 was not needed in large numbers because China will not have large numbers of fifth-generation fighters by 2020. Despite large numbers of F-35s and some F-22s, "China, by contrast, is projected to have no fifth-generation aircraft by 2020. And by 2025, the gap only widens," Mr. Gates said. Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said he did not see "any inconsistency in what the SecDef has said and the DIA assessment." "In both cases, we don't see any significant fifth generation Chinese fighter capability for next 10 years or so," Mr. Whitman said. Richard Fisher, a China military-affairs specialist with the International Assessment and Strategy Center, said the DIA's response to the Chinese general's remarks were comforting. "But one has to suspect that there is now light between recent DIA assessments and what Secretary Gates said on July 16," Mr. Fisher said. "Secretary Gates basically said that a Chinese fifth generation fighter threat would not materialize well into the 2020s, while the DIA seems to imply that their 'range' of assessments could accept this happening closer to 2020." For Mr. Fisher, the most important issue is not the quality of U.S. intelligence analysis on Chinese weapons developments, but U.S. leadership. "The Obama administration convinced the Congress to deny U.S. forces a critical capability, the F-22, in some part due to its assessment of Chinese next-generation fighter capabilities, an assessment that may not have been the 'consensus' within the intelligence community," he said. "Democracies require informed debate in order to survive. It is appearing that the debate over the termination of F-22 production was not sufficiently informed regarding emerging Chinese capabilities." Mr. Fisher said some evidence indicates China may have several fifth- generation fighter programs in train and could augment less capable jets with upgrades and advances. "I doubt that the Chinese are going to limit their force to 187 fifth- generation air-superiority fighters," he said, referring to the Pentagon's limited buy of F-22s. A U.S. Air Force official involved in the F-35 development program told Aviation Week that the Chinese will "have a difficult road if their design is tied to the J-10," China's indigenous fourth- generation fighter. The officer said that significantly reducing the new aircraft's radar cross-section will require more than stealth outer coatings. New integrated design and shaping as well as coatings are needed, the officer was quoted as saying in the magazine's Nov. 13 article on the new Chinese jet. A Chinese Embassy spokesman did not respond to an e-mail seeking comment on the new jet. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Mike" wrote in message ... http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/security/ (Inside the Ring - Bill Gertz) New China fighter A Chinese general is boasting that the People's Liberation Army Air Force will soon fly a new advanced fighter that U.S. intelligence projections had said would not be ready for 10 years. The new fifth- generation Chinese fighter could be deployed as early as 2017 -- years earlier than announced by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates in explaining his cancellation of the U.S. version of the fifth- generation fighter, the F-22. Gen. Ho Weirong, the deputy commander of the Chinese air force, told Chinese state-run media on Monday that China's fifth-generation fighter has been under intense development and will enter service in the next eight to 10 years. Characteristics of this type of jet include radar-evading stealth, supersonic cruise, super maneuverability and the capability for short takeoffs. The comments by the Chinese general represent an unusual disclosure by the Chinese military, which rarely mentions future weapons systems. The disclosure will likely fuel further debate in the United States over the F-22, which was canceled in favor of the F-35 by Mr. Gates earlier this year. Mr. Gates said in a speech to the Economic Club of Chicago July 16 that the F-22 was canceled as part of considerations for the proper mix of warplanes needed for a potential of "state-to-state conflict." The F-35, despite development problems, was chosen over the F-22 for cost reasons, but he noted that it was "clearly a capability that we do need." Mr. Gates stated in the speech that the F-22 was not needed because China's air force would not have a comparable jet by 2020. "Consider that by 2020, the United States is projected to have nearly 2,500 manned combat aircraft of all kinds," he said. "Of those, nearly 1,100 will be the most advanced fifth-generation F-35s and F-22s. China, by contrast, is projected to have no fifth-generation aircraft by 2020. And by 2025, the gap only widens." As a result, the United States would have about 1,700 advanced fifth- generation fighters "versus a handful of comparable aircraft for the Chinese. Nonetheless, some portray this scenario as a dire threat to America's national security," Mr. Gates said. A Pentagon spokesman did not reply to e-mails or telephone calls seeking comment on the issue. A Defense Intelligence Agency spokesman also did not respond to e-mails. Richard Fisher, a China military-affairs specialist, said the reports on a Chinese advanced fighter reflected "unprecedented transparency" by China. "One has to assume they have some confidence in their projections in order to make them public," said Mr. Fisher, of the International Assessment and Strategy Center. "So what is the Obama administration going to do, ignore this and proceed with F-22 production termination, to the detriment of U.S. security interests in Asia and beyond?" According to defense specialists, the F-35 is comparable in some ways to the F-22 but lacks what is called "supercruise" capability, a feature that enables it to penetrate deep into enemy airspace, launch its weapons and exit without using up all its fuel. Mr. Fisher said he thinks that canceling F-22 production without a better warplane in the pipeline is tantamount to unilateral disarmament. "In Asia, this means a decline in American military credibility and an increase in regional instability," he said. Mr. Fisher also called on U.S. intelligence agencies to explain "what appears to be a significant underestimation of Chinese capability." "The PLA does not make it easy to read their future, but after spending $40 billion a year on intelligence, it would be a real scandal if they got this one wrong," he said. DIA on China's new fighter The Defense Intelligence Agency is sticking by its estimates of when China will deploy a fifth-generation jet fighter after recent remarks by a Chinese general that Beijing's most advanced jet could be fielded by 2017 - years earlier than U.S. intelligence projections. "We believe that first flight of a Chinese fifth-generation fighter will occur in the next few years; however, we also believe it will take about 10 years before the [People's Liberation Army] begins to operationally deploy a fifth-generation fighter in meaningful numbers," DIA spokesman Donald Black told Inside the Ring. As reported in this space last week, Gen. He Weirong, the deputy commander of the Chinese air force, told Chinese state-run media that the new advanced jet would fly soon despite U.S. intelligence projections that it will not be ready for combat for at least 10 years. (Gen. He was incorrectly identified as Gen. Ho Weirong last week.) Gen. He said the first jet could be deployed by 2017, and his remarks have sparked renewed debate over whether to continue production of the Pentagon's most advanced jet, the F-22. Production of the jet, beyond 187 more planes already in the pipeline, was effectively canceled by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates earlier this year. If deployed by 2017, the new advanced warplane would make China's jet force more advanced than those of Britain, France and other Western European statesaccording to military analysts. Asked if U.S. projections about the new Chinese jet were incorrect, Mr. Black said "the intelligence community has been warning of the development of a Chinese fifth-generation fighter for several years." "Intelligence estimates typically provide a range of dates associated with operational deployment," he said. "Gen. He's comments are generally consistent with these intelligence community estimates of Chinese fifth-generation fighter operational deployment." The United States is deploying large numbers of F-35 jets, which lack some fifth-generation capabilities of the F-22, such as supercruise, a propulsion system that allows the jet to fly longer distances, fire its long-range weapons, and then exit without running out of fuel. Mr. Gates said in July that U.S. projections of when China would deploy its new fifth-generation jet, dubbed J-XX by some analysts, indicate that the F-22 was not needed in large numbers because China will not have large numbers of fifth-generation fighters by 2020. Despite large numbers of F-35s and some F-22s, "China, by contrast, is projected to have no fifth-generation aircraft by 2020. And by 2025, the gap only widens," Mr. Gates said. Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said he did not see "any inconsistency in what the SecDef has said and the DIA assessment." "In both cases, we don't see any significant fifth generation Chinese fighter capability for next 10 years or so," Mr. Whitman said. Richard Fisher, a China military-affairs specialist with the International Assessment and Strategy Center, said the DIA's response to the Chinese general's remarks were comforting. "But one has to suspect that there is now light between recent DIA assessments and what Secretary Gates said on July 16," Mr. Fisher said. "Secretary Gates basically said that a Chinese fifth generation fighter threat would not materialize well into the 2020s, while the DIA seems to imply that their 'range' of assessments could accept this happening closer to 2020." For Mr. Fisher, the most important issue is not the quality of U.S. intelligence analysis on Chinese weapons developments, but U.S. leadership. "The Obama administration convinced the Congress to deny U.S. forces a critical capability, the F-22, in some part due to its assessment of Chinese next-generation fighter capabilities, an assessment that may not have been the 'consensus' within the intelligence community," he said. "Democracies require informed debate in order to survive. It is appearing that the debate over the termination of F-22 production was not sufficiently informed regarding emerging Chinese capabilities." Mr. Fisher said some evidence indicates China may have several fifth- generation fighter programs in train and could augment less capable jets with upgrades and advances. "I doubt that the Chinese are going to limit their force to 187 fifth- generation air-superiority fighters," he said, referring to the Pentagon's limited buy of F-22s. A U.S. Air Force official involved in the F-35 development program told Aviation Week that the Chinese will "have a difficult road if their design is tied to the J-10," China's indigenous fourth- generation fighter. The officer said that significantly reducing the new aircraft's radar cross-section will require more than stealth outer coatings. New integrated design and shaping as well as coatings are needed, the officer was quoted as saying in the magazine's Nov. 13 article on the new Chinese jet. A Chinese Embassy spokesman did not respond to an e-mail seeking comment on the new jet. 8 to 10 years? that's close to the 2020 estimate, and whenever has an advanced weapon delivered on time? it's just talk until a prototype actually flies. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() The officer said that significantly reducing the new aircraft's radar cross-section will require more than stealth outer coatings. New integrated design and shaping as well as coatings are needed, the officer was quoted as saying in the magazine's Nov. 13 article on the new Chinese jet. Been away from this group for some time. Question. Dogfighting has no place in modern aerial combat. Presumably long before the enemy comes within visual range onboard sensors would have decteted the opponent and high performance guided missiles fired. No one gets near enough to fire his guns. So what is the advantage in super maneuverability in the design specs of the plane? In all the videos I have seen where the pilot tries to demonstrate the superior performance of his aircraft nothing the pilot had done could possibly escape a locked-on missile. The second question is on stealth. Again you don't want to come within shooting range of the enemy. Dive bombing a well defenced target is sucidal. Against defenseless third world countries any old ordinary plane can do the job. So against a well defended target one tries to launch the munition from as far away as possible. Once the munition is launched the plane reveals it location and has to scramble out of the way. Its pointless to hang around anyway since the mission is already (launch the munition) and you don't want to risk a multimillion dollar plane and the pilot. Therefore what critical advantages do stealth and high maneuverablity confer to 5th generation aircraft to justify the cost, long development times and technical complexity. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 19, 9:07*pm, PaPa Peng wrote:
The officer said that significantly reducing the new aircraft's radar cross-section will require more than stealth outer coatings. New integrated design and shaping as well as coatings are needed, the officer was quoted as saying in the magazine's Nov. 13 article on the new Chinese jet. Been away from this group for some time. *Question. *Dogfighting has no place in modern aerial combat. * Presumably long before the enemy comes within visual range onboard sensors would have decteted the opponent and high performance guided missiles fired. *No one gets near enough to fire his guns. *So what is the advantage in super maneuverability in the design specs of the plane? *In all the videos I have seen where the pilot tries to demonstrate the superior performance of his aircraft nothing the pilot had done could possibly escape a locked-on missile. The second question is on stealth. *Again you don't want to come within shooting range of the enemy. *Dive bombing a well defenced target is sucidal. *Against defenseless third world countries any old ordinary plane can do the job. So against a well defended target one tries to launch the munition from as far away as possible. *Once the munition is launched the plane reveals it location and has to scramble out of the way. *Its pointless to hang around anyway since the mission is already (launch the munition) and you don't want to risk a multimillion dollar plane and the pilot. Therefore what critical advantages do stealth and high maneuverablity confer to 5th generation aircraft to justify the cost, long development times and technical complexity. Ever think their probable adversary would have US supplied weapons? Like to dogfight, have stealth and turn inside your turn? Start saying you don't need to dogfight and people like Yeager and any hot fighter pilot are going to turn you into a smoking hole in the ground. Do some reading. ECM does wonders against a missile lock on. The key in air combat is not only a great set of technology and tools but a lot of training and knowledge about your adversary and how to beat their weaknesses. They can't handle 2v1? That's how you hit them. Can't fight down in the dirt? Get them there. Have a problem at high altitude you can go after, get them there. Tend to rely on ground control or high tech gadgets? That's a weakness. Use the same tactics day after day at the same time? They're toast. You get the drift. You force them to go where they're weak. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 19, 9:07*pm, PaPa Peng wrote:
The officer said that significantly reducing the new aircraft's radar cross-section will require more than stealth outer coatings. New integrated design and shaping as well as coatings are needed, the officer was quoted as saying in the magazine's Nov. 13 article on the new Chinese jet. Been away from this group for some time. *Question. *Dogfighting has no place in modern aerial combat. * Presumably long before the enemy comes within visual range onboard sensors would have decteted the opponent and high performance guided missiles fired. *No one gets near enough to fire his guns. *So what is the advantage in super maneuverability in the design specs of the plane? *In all the videos I have seen where the pilot tries to demonstrate the superior performance of his aircraft nothing the pilot had done could possibly escape a locked-on missile. The second question is on stealth. *Again you don't want to come within shooting range of the enemy. *Dive bombing a well defenced target is sucidal. *Against defenseless third world countries any old ordinary plane can do the job. So against a well defended target one tries to launch the munition from as far away as possible. *Once the munition is launched the plane reveals it location and has to scramble out of the way. *Its pointless to hang around anyway since the mission is already (launch the munition) and you don't want to risk a multimillion dollar plane and the pilot. Therefore what critical advantages do stealth and high maneuverablity confer to 5th generation aircraft to justify the cost, long development times and technical complexity. The whole "kill'em before they can reach" sounds really interesting in theory and probably will eventually work in practice. But I just don't think it's gonna be an smooth ride just like gun and powder didn't replace sword and spear overnight, we all know, at the initial stage, rudimentary musket was no match for arrow and bow. Anyway, the bottom line is this theory has never really been seriously tested in real combat. So before jumping with your two feet into it, it'd be prudent to hedge your bet by maintaining skills proven to be needed. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "PaPa Peng" wrote in message ... The officer said that significantly reducing the new aircraft's radar cross-section will require more than stealth outer coatings. New integrated design and shaping as well as coatings are needed, the officer was quoted as saying in the magazine's Nov. 13 article on the new Chinese jet. Dogfighting has no place in modern aerial combat. Where we've heard that before? |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Roger Conroy" wrote in message ... "PaPa Peng" wrote in message ... The officer said that significantly reducing the new aircraft's radar cross-section will require more than stealth outer coatings. New integrated design and shaping as well as coatings are needed, the officer was quoted as saying in the magazine's Nov. 13 article on the new Chinese jet. Dogfighting has no place in modern aerial combat. Where we've heard that before? Sorry for the typo! Should be: Where have we heard that before? |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Roger Conroy wrote:
"PaPa Peng" wrote in message ... The officer said that significantly reducing the new aircraft's radar cross-section will require more than stealth outer coatings. New integrated design and shaping as well as coatings are needed, the officer was quoted as saying in the magazine's Nov. 13 article on the new Chinese jet. Dogfighting has no place in modern aerial combat. Where we've heard that before? Last time? Just before the Falkland's nonsense... -- William Black "Any number under six" The answer given by Englishman Richard Peeke when asked by the Duke of Medina Sidonia how many Spanish sword and buckler men he could beat single handed with a quarterstaff. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
William Black wrote:
Roger Conroy wrote: "PaPa Peng" wrote in message ... The officer said that significantly reducing the new aircraft's radar cross-section will require more than stealth outer coatings. New integrated design and shaping as well as coatings are needed, the officer was quoted as saying in the magazine's Nov. 13 article on the new Chinese jet. Dogfighting has no place in modern aerial combat. Where we've heard that before? Last time? Just before the Falkland's nonsense... Problem is, except in the rare all out war (two in the history of the race), you need to close to visual to confirm targets, and then... Dan |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
eatfastnoodle ha scritto:
Anyway, the bottom line is this theory has never really been seriously tested in real combat. So before jumping with your two feet into it, it'd be prudent to hedge your bet by maintaining skills proven to be needed. 'Nam doesn't count ? Long-range AAM has done a not exactly stellar prestation, and all show was done by Sidewinders, Atolls, and, indeed, guns... |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Who Is in Control of China's Aircraft Carriers? | Sound | Home Built | 2 | March 10th 07 07:48 PM |
"Bravo Sierra" check (was "China's Army on Combat Alert") | redc1c4 | Military Aviation | 19 | April 3rd 04 09:21 PM |
The "Lightweight" Fighter is on the verge of overtaking the F-105 as the heaviest single engine fighter of all time. Talk about irony. | Scott Ferrin | Military Aviation | 1 | November 24th 03 03:12 PM |
China's Chengdu J-10 Fighter - Big Trouble? | Kevin Brooks | Military Aviation | 0 | November 18th 03 02:06 PM |