Geoffrey Forden (MIT) - "How China Loses the Coming Space War"

mxiong

Junior Member
But I can't help asking: "a prolonged guerrilla war" for NUCLEAR China, are you *** kidding me?
 
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juli.mafia

New Member
ehyy,wheeii,calm down man.I spoke from my heart i didn't mean to hurt you.I'm albanian and we used to be friends and allies once.Or you are a modern born china boy who plays a lot of videogames.You should knw that temper and the war of nerves is a key to success in warfare.That is from your ancient master sun-tzu.or you dont't read it anymore.Its works are studied in the ost famous NATO military academies.So this is a forum,no. My father was a major in the albanian army and i know a little about warfare.The key in modern warfare are:Mobilty,Firepower,Information.Thats it.If you dont dominate or at least protect the skies and seas you don't have no mobility,no firepower no intelligence.Its simple.Remember its a forum,or aren't you warm with democracy.In a forum every person can say what he feels or thinks.Dude america has 20 000 modern third generation MBT-s (abram series) 2400 third generation aircrafts and 400 fourth generation F-22 and is preparing to sell 100 F-22 to Japan your arch enemy.In NATO codespeaking is RED ALERT for the chinese military industry.You should work harder.I hope the best from you.Bye
 

mxiong

Junior Member
OK, one more question: How in the world can such an alliance be formed to war against China, geopolitically and economically, let alone military?

Oh, BTW, we wasted a lot of resources on your country who betrayed us eventually, so I really can't trust your words.
 

Gollevainen

Colonel
VIP Professional
Registered Member
Ok, here's a welcome form the Moderation team to Juli.Mafia:

First of all little bit about techical posting issues. In future use basebar after sentences (ending to .) its extremely hard to follow text like you posted above.

Seccondly about the actual stuff you have posted. This is supposed to be military discussion forum where people discuss about chinese military manners maturely and properly. We encourage our members to take as proffesional point of views as possiple and posting in far deeper and analyzing levels than just simply chatting around. Now in the light of this goal, how does "ugly J-serie" fighter type of comments fit into it?

If you feel that you are not able to conduct the level of discussion that we expect you, then why not just satisfy on the reading part and not so much with the talking part. Read, Learn and Understand...thats the key to good discussion.

Thirdly what does some general mongerings about inaccurate western-hegemony boasting have to do with chinese space warfighting ability (the topic of this thread)? Before anything else, get familiar to our rules and posting manners.

And this is a forum, but not in anymeans demorcacy. There are strickt rules under which members can express themselves, but when the line is broken, secret police walks in and takes care of the wrongdoers.

Gollevainen
KGB
 

juli.mafia

New Member
Thank you gollavenien.I really appreciate that from you.I really needed to learn about your rules.(i'm not ironic,i swear)the fact is that i'm not a military analyst,nor a soldier.I just tried to share my opinions with you.I hope the majority of you are military officials or have had experience in the military.If you were prudent you would have noticed that in the first message(comment)i stressed the fact: I DON'T KNOW WHERE TO SEND MY COMMENTS YET.In other words i didn't know how to use the forum.(my english is terrible i know)You should know that i have worked in public procurement for years and i'm only interested in military issues,not really concerned.BUT we leave in troubled world,where every development is important to the broad scene.China's rise as a new economical power is one of such developments.But what is good for you is not good for someone else(competitors)And if you want to be prepared you should imagine the worst.As for my country,its too litle and too weak to influence global developments.But we never betrayed China.In our communist obsolete view,China betrayed the eastern front,warming relations with the U.S. and establishing trade relations with it.In my view,China did good then and now(with the economical reforms)The fact is that we both benefitted from this relationship.We represented communist china in the U.N. for decades.The chinese "secret police" (int.services)had a main europe station in Albania,and in the Albanian embassies worldwide.You were not recognized as a legitimate state,for a while by most of the world.Dont' forget this.And the weapons you brought us,were credited,and we are still paying for your obsolete T-55,and MiG-17,21.Excuse me for exiting the nature of this forum.I really have warm feelings for China,and all the other young rising powers(like INDIA)i wish a multilateral world.
 

Gollevainen

Colonel
VIP Professional
Registered Member
Yeas yeas yeas...

But you see there are proper and different threads to those subjects, this thread is to analyze and discuss about the article posted in the link of the first reply.

So no more off-topics
 

crobato

Colonel
VIP Professional
To sum up my views.

1. Sending a target higher does not make it any easier to hit. It not only increases distance, but a higher orbit means a higher orbital speed (I cannot imagine how someone from MIT can make that mistake). What a higher target can do is keep being in the LOS of tracking stations longer, so it is easier to track and therefore send instructions to the missile. However, a change orbit also adds many uncertainty because it is leaving a predefined and known orbit, and a change inserts variables (note Murphy's Law) so new tracking and track calculations have to be made on the fly.

Your inertial navigation systems, flight telemetry, sensors, guidance systems, tracking and tracking control has to be very precise in order to pull something like this, and this are the real issues at hand, because it signifies that China's missile control technologies are nothing more than state of the art. That is what people are getting freaked out about because these abilities are going to be applied on every missile and filter down from everything to an ICBM to a grunt's antitank missile.

2. Despite showing the technological ability to do so, China has on the other hand, has not demonstrated that it has built the actual assets and in the numbers needed to do so. Much of the land based missiles being built are the short ranged ones aimed at Taiwan. DF-21, DF-31, -31A continue to be nuclear based. Every missile in China seems to be on their "usual" business.

3. The idea that they are using Long March rockets is absurd. These missiles take too long to prepare and would have been too obvious. We know for a fact that the ASAT was made by a KT-1 booster, which is a small 13 meter solid fuel booster based on the primary stage of a DF-21. It can be launched from TELs, and for the most part, can be located anywhere and launched like ICBMs. The previous KT-1 launches have been connected with 50kg micro-satellites, so the KKV itself has to be a 50kg micro-satellite. Used on larger rockets with much greater payloads, it is possible to have multiple KKVs in a single rocket.

But I must add that while the potential is there, there does not appear to be any serious action in building up a pool of KT-1 and KT-2 boosters so far that can be used for an operational ASAT system.

4. The small size of the KKV means it can be lauched from ALLVs that can be hosted alight by H-6s, even Flankers or B-737s. Given we have seen some strange things going on with the H-6 program, I would say there is a good serious chance that China's ASAT program is developing the use of air launched methods.

My conclusions is that China's ASAT capability remains mainly in the demonstrative and developmental phase, and not by any means reasonably operational. There is still development among paths with more powerful boosters (KT-2 and KT-2A) and the ALLV project.

I must add this article:

January 18, 2008
By Bill Gertz -

Submarine ASAT

Pentagon officials are increasingly worried that China's military is advancing its clandestine anti-satellite (ASAT) weapons program by building a submarine-launched direct-ascent missile system.

New information indicates the secret ASAT program, which Chinese leaders refused to discuss in recent meetings with visiting U.S. military leaders, will involve a space-capable ASAT warhead for the new JL-2 submarine-launched ballistic missile. The new missile is being readied for China's new ballistic missile submarine, called the Jin-class, or Type 094. The ASAT submarine will provide the ultimate in stealth weapons and could cripple U.S. satellites.

The reports about submarine ASAT basing followed comments by Gen. James E. Cartwright, the former U.S. Strategic Command commander and current vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who told Congress last year the U.S. military is prepared to use conventional missile strikes on land-based Chinese ASAT launchers if Beijing began shooting down U.S. satellites.

China successfully tested a direct-ascent ASAT missile from a mobile ground-based launcher a year ago, sending thousands of pieces of debris from a destroyed weather satellite into low Earth orbit and threatening U.S. satellites and others.

The new information bolsters theoretical writings by Chinese military officials, which were disclosed in a report to Congress last year by Michael Pillsbury, a former Reagan administration defense official and specialist on China.

Mr. Pillsbury stated in his report, "An Assessment of China's Anti-Satellite and Space Warfare Programs," that China's sea-based and submarine-based ASAT were mentioned in 2004 by Liu Huanyu of the Dalian Naval Academy.

"Nuclear submarines are not only well concealed but can sail for a long period of time," Mr. Liu said. "By deploying just a few anti-satellite nuclear submarines in the ocean, one can seriously threaten the entire military space system of the enemy."

Surface ships also can be built for "anti-satellite operations," he stated.

Mr. Pillsbury's report was produced for the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission.

Sounds nice in theory but I feel this is more of a red herring and certain quarters in the US still freaked over the ASAT test. Like I said, the real significance lies in the reassessment of the effectiveness of Chinese missiles in all fields.

Putting ASAT launchers on subs only moves their vulnerability from B-2 bombers to SSNs. And I would say they are more vulnerable in water than on land, given the sheer land mass area of China vs. the number of B-2s, compared to the limited sea area vs. the sheer number of SSNs the US can deploy.

Theoritical writings of Chinese officials do not represent official position of the PLA. Its something to be considered, but then whether or not such a program actually exists is a totally separate matter, since the policies of the PLA is not formed from a single opinion. Of course in any organization, the pros and cons of each method would be deeply debated, and so far there is nothing to suggest the PLAN's SSBN program would be used for any ASAT and ditto with the so called antiship-anticarrier ballistic missile effort. As far as it goes, the SSBNs are for the classic nuclear deterrent role.
 

bladerunner

Banned Idiot
OK, one more question: How in the world can such an alliance be formed to war against China, geopolitically and economically, let alone military?

Oh, BTW, we wasted a lot of resources on your country who betrayed us eventually, so I really can't trust your words.

Its a possibility considering considering you have South Korea and its new president declaring an intent to b more pro american, Canada with a conservative government has moved away from China,Australia will alway support America.. EEngland will get a Conservative government at the next election. This can be seen in the move away from requesting a dropping of the arms ban by France and Germany, whose declared intention is to mend the fences with Usa and then theres India. Well enough of that, Im interested in hearing a response about the infrared question asked by an earlier poster
 

PaPaPeng

Just Hatched
Registered Member
To sum up my views.

1. Sending a target higher does not make it any easier to hit. It not only increases distance, but a higher orbit means a higher orbital speed (I cannot imagine how someone from MIT can make that mistake).

It is counter intuitive. But I do distinctively remember that in order to chase and dock with another spacecraft that is some distance ahead the maneuvering craft has to drop to a lower orbit. Thus the space shuttle is always on a lower orbit than the International Space Station until it is ready to dock. The image of the Space Shuttle from the ISS always has the Earth in the background.
 

Quickie

Colonel
Sorry to say that is not exactly correct. A satellite in a stable orbit will start to fall to earth when its orbital speed is reduced. The opposite is also true i.e. the satellite will fly off into the solar system at its much higher escape velocity.
 
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