PLAAF Breaking News (including articles with Pictures or videos)

Franklin

Captain
Article about China's air force pilot training. Changing the culture and mentality of the personnel is going to take longer than changing the technology of the planes.

China's Air Force Is Fixing Its Shortcomings

In a seminal RAND Project Air Force report written over two decades ago, entitled “Russia's Air Power at the Crossroads” (PDF), the author concluded that the Soviet air force had achieved marked improvement in the tactical skills of its fighter pilots, yet most pilots were still “bound by a heavily scripted tactical repertoire that was all but completely dominated by ground control.” Such scripted training scenarios, the report continued, “left [pilots] little room for exercising the free-form initiative and adaptability that had long been a hallmark of Western tactical air practice.”

Similar things can be said about today's People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF). The PLAAF is one of the largest and most capable forces in the world in terms of quantity and technology, but Western analysts have long questioned its rigid, outdated approach to pilot training — relying heavily on ground control and scripted environments to achieve training objectives. The prevailing view among many Western observers is that Chinese fighter pilots lack the tactical mindset to engage and prevail in a dynamic, unscripted combat environment.

Our recently released report on PLAAF training suggests that narrative may be changing. Our analysis found that the PLAAF has initiated system-wide reform to train fighter pilots in the skills necessary to “fight and win” against potentially superior military competitors like the U.S. At the heart of this reform is an effort to train officers under what Chinese military leaders refer to as “actual combat conditions,” which include, among other things, nighttime battle training, complex electromagnetic conditions, special geographical environments and extreme weather conditions.

The PLAAF has been experimenting with giving pilots the responsibility to create their own flight plans with full autonomy over their sorties — from starting their engines to changing navigation routes and flying tactics in the air — without strict control from a commander in the control tower. This type of autonomy represents a significant departure from past practice, which emphasized reliance on ground control. PLAAF pilots are also increasingly evaluated using real-time video feed playback and other flight-data recordings previously unavailable to aviators. Video playback offers an important teaching tool to correct mistakes and provides an objective means of analysis for flight leads and instructors in assessing pilots' performance, no matter their experience or skill level.

The PLAAF has also redoubled attempts to instill discipline in its pilots by offering honest assessments of shortcomings. Such efforts include professionalizing unit training through adherence to less-scripted, combat-realistic training for the battlefield rather than the test. For example, during a November 2013 year-end training event at a Guangzhou air regiment, some of the aircraft identified to take part in the test had “just returned from seasonal changeover maintenance,” and four of the pilots chosen to participate were “ill-prepared” for examinations because they had just completed “aircraft transition training,” according to reports in the Chinese air force newspaper Kongjun Bao. The regiment leaders nonetheless decided to proceed with the assessment as planned, reminding the pilots that evaluations were meant to gauge “actual combat ability,” not simply who would obtain “high marks.”

PLAAF pilots still lack the ability to adapt to rapidly changing battlefield conditions and make autonomous decisions on the fly.

When compared with their U.S. Air Force counterparts, however, clear deficiencies remain among PLAAF pilots in the area of combat tactics and skills. PLAAF pilots still lack the ability to adapt to rapidly changing battlefield conditions and make autonomous decisions on the fly. Such skills remain new to many PLAAF pilots accustomed to having almost all of their tactical maneuvers dictated by commanders in the control tower. For example, one Kongjun Bao report noted this deficiency in flight leads taking over from ground control:

Ground commands often are not able to keep up with the complex and changeable air situation. Pilots relied too much on the commands and guidance from the ground, which was not conducive to enhancing the enthusiasm and initiative of airborne combatants.

Our findings also highlight an inability among some PLAAF pilots to hit ground targets successfully upon receiving inflight changes to flight trajectories or plans, as well as a reluctance among pilots to take risks for fear of making mistakes or out of safety concerns.

Our report supports the notion that the PLAAF is fully aware of its shortcomings in pilot combat skills and is taking steps to rectify many of these deficiencies. However, cultivating true pilot autonomy in unscripted scenarios takes decades to hone and demands a training system that encourages honest assessments of mistakes. While the PLAAF appears to have undertaken major reform in how it trains its pilots, success will ultimately depend on breaking the service's deep-seated institutional and cultural barriers.

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I don't know where to put it, but it'd be cool to see more:
DDVFPTzV0AAadus.jpg


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10 ballistic missiles salvo launching.
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I put here the google translation of
Quand un pilote de Boeing 747 rencontre un missile chinois en plein vol
26 juillet 2017
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as I'll be reading it (I won't repost maps, picture, videos):
Il est pour le moins rare, pour ne pas dire inhabituel, qu’un pilote de ligne rencontre un missile en phase de décollage à 9 800 mètres d’altitude, mais c’est ce qu’il arrive à Christiaan van Heijst en Chine dimanche dernier, à bord de son Boeing 747-8.

En volant sur la ligne Hong Kong – Bakou au-dessus de la province de Xinjiang, vers 14h15 UTC, le pilote néerlandais a été surpris par un point lumineux jaillissant de l’horizon, point qui s’est transformé en une bulle en forme de gouttelette, gagnant rapidement en taille et en altitude.

Quelques minutes après, un long sillage tourbillonné variant en couleur et en forme commence à se former, probablement avec les gaz d’échappement de ce qu’il semble être une fusée.

Étonnés par ce qu’ils voient à travers leur cockpit, l’équipage du vol consulte les messages aux navigants aériens (NOTAM) sur leur route mais ne trouve qu’une zone fermée dans un rayon de 100 km autour d’un point situé au sud d’Ürümqi.
"It is rare, not to say unusual, for an airline pilot to encounter a take-off missile at an altitude of 9,800 meters, but that is what happens to Christiaan van Heijst in China on Sunday Last, aboard his Boeing 747-8.

By flying on the Hong Kong-Baku line over Xinjiang province at around 14:15 UTC, the Dutch pilot was surprised by a bright spot rising from the horizon, which turned into a bubble Droplet, rapidly gaining size and altitude.

A few minutes later, a long swirled trail varying in color and shape begins to form, probably with the exhaust of what it seems to be a rocket.

Surprised by what they see through their cockpit, the crew of the flight consults the messages to the airmen (NOTAM) on their route but finds only a closed area within a radius of 100 km around a point located at South of Ürümqi."


Alors qu’est-ce que Christiaan van Heijst a vu réellement ?

Il s’agit en réalité d’un essai de missile chinois que l’on a justement parlé dimanche, dans le dossier «
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», avant même que le lancement ait lieu.

Le NOTAM que Christaan et son co-pilote ont consulté devrait être l’A2052/17, actif entre 13h50 et 15h00 UTC. Le reportage à la fois rare et intéressant de Christiaan montre d’ailleurs que le missile est décollé entre 14h10 et 14h15 UTC, et qu’il semble être composé de deux étages.

Ce missile est parti du site de lancement militaire de Korla en direction sud-est vers le sud de la province de Qinghai, où se trouve la zone de retombée. On estime que la distance parcourue avoisine les 1 375 km.

On ignore pour le moment la nature exacte de ce missile, qui pourrait être, toujours selon notre estimation, soit un missile anti-balistique ou une fusée-sonde scientifique.

Mais si c’est effectivement le premier cas, alors le missile intercepteur devrait atteindre un ΔV supérieur ou égal à 3 km/s en se basant sur la portée de l’engin suggérée par les NOTAM.

Il s’agirait donc d’un missile équivalent à celui du système américain THAAD-ER. Et le seul que l’on connait aujourd’hui en Chine est le fameux HQ-19 (voir notre dossier «
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»).

En fait notre pilote néerlandais n’est pas le seul témoin de cet essai de missile chinois. En parcourant sur le blogosphère chinois, on a trouvé au moins une dizaine d’internautes qui ont posté des photos et des vidéos de ce qu’ils pensent être un phénomène astronomique ou un OVNI à l’heure exacte du test, qui a duré environ 15 minutes.

Ces photos et vidéos ont d’ailleurs été prises à différents endroits en Chine que l’on peut voir dans ce schéma – les lignes jaunes représentent les zones aériennes interdites de survol par les NOTAM, les témoins se trouvent aux points rouges et la ligne blanche illustre la trajectoire possible du missile quel qu’il soit.
"So what did Christiaan van Heijst actually see?

It is actually a test of Chinese missile that was spoken on Sunday, in the folder "4 ballistic missile shootings in July? ", Even before the launch took place.

The NOTAM that Christaan and his co-pilot have consulted should be the A2052 / 17, active between 13:50 and 15:00 UTC. The rare and interesting report of Christiaan shows that the missile is taking off between 14:10 and 14:15 UTC, and that it seems to be composed of two floors.

The missile departed from the Korla military launch site in a southeasterly direction to the south of Qinghai province, where the fallout zone is located. The distance traveled is estimated at 1,375 km.

The exact nature of this missile is unknown at this time, which could still be, according to our estimation, either an anti-ballistic missile or a scientific sounding rocket.

But if this is indeed the first case, then the interceptor missile should reach a ΔV greater than or equal to 3 km / s based on the range of the missile as suggested by the NOTAM.

It would therefore be a missile equivalent to that of the American THAAD-ER system. And the only one we know today in China is the famous HQ-19 (see our dossier "China reveals its first missile tests").

In fact our Dutch pilot is not the only witness of this Chinese missile test. By browsing through the Chinese blogosphere, at least ten people have been found who have posted photos and videos of what they believe to be an astronomical phenomenon or a UFO at the exact time of the test, which lasted about 15 minutes.

These photos and videos have been taken at different locations in China, which can be seen in this diagram - the yellow lines represent the aerial zones forbidden to fly over the NOTAMs, the witnesses are at the red dots and the white line Illustrates the possible trajectory of the missile."

Les zones réservées au test du missile (jaune) et les endroits où se trouvent les témoignages en rouge (Image : East Pendulum)

Et voici quelques uns de ces témoignages :
"Missile test areas (yellow) and red testimonies (Image: East Pendulum)

And here are some of these testimonies:"
 
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