Given no overseas base, H-20 is unlikely able to hit CONUS in high numbers not to mention each mission will also require atleast one refueling somewhere over the pacific and take 20+ hours.A few survivable bombers will easily bring same LACM salvo as SSGN. And will do it again and again.
SSGNs are still obviously terrible for homeland strikes for the same reason they would be against China... What's the total salvo depth they can offer, how many targets are there in CONUS and what effect can each missile achieve per target? Particularly for the kind of large scale industrial/broad purpose strikes you bring up, that's not their utility.
PLA's accumulated Pacific hydrological data is likely not enough to support the SSGN's deep penetration into the Pacific for strike missions, but this is precisely the mission for the Type 095.
It's a strategic bomber ffs. If it can't strike CONUS efficiently - wtf you even build it for.Given no overseas base, H-20 is unlikely able to hit CONUS in high numbers not to mention each mission will also require atleast one refueling somewhere over the pacific and take 20+ hours.
H-20 can be used for quick and relatively fast strikes but sustained strikes will require a large fleet of SSGNs.
You said it yourself, it's a strategic bomber. It's meant to deliver nuclear strikes to CONUS and you only need to do it once and not worry about the logistics afterward which very different from flying 20 intercontinental sorties per day.It's a strategic bomber ffs. If it can't strike CONUS efficiently - wtf you even build it for.
There isn't much difference in this case - it's meant to deliver strike and return. It can be done with special payloads, it can be done with normal payloads. The only situation it won't be doable if for some reason China wouldn't develop conventional counterparts to weapons in question.You said it yourself, it's a strategic bomber. It's meant to deliver nuclear strikes to CONUS and you only need to do it once and not worry about the logistics afterward very different from flying 20 intercontinental sorties per day.
Wouldn’t it be easier to just procure a shorter missile?And that still wouldn't make any SSNs into SSBNs, as there isn't enough hull diameter to fit SL-ICBMs that are almost always as long as the hull diameter is tall without having a significant turtleback protruding out of the submarine's hull.
China's JL-3 and JL-4 are about 12-14 meters long, given their immense range requirements. It'd be impossible to fit them on the 095s without significant modifications to the sub's hull (i.e. turtleback etc), such that the PLAN might as well procure a different submarine design altogether.
Sustained strikes to CONUS by air means having bombers and tankers over the pacific effectively 24/7. It's far harder to do than you think it is. Nuclear strikes are comparatively much easier because you only need to do it once. Such operations literally have never been pulled off before.There isn't much difference in this case - it's meant to deliver strike and return. It can be done with special payloads, it can be done with normal payloads.
Even if strategic bomber sorties take time indeed - it is incomparably shorter - and, quite likely, safer, - than new sorties by submarines.
Submarine is a snealy way to have salvo nearby on standby, but surely it is single worst possible way to sustain strikes(you literally can produce ICBMs faster)..
You don't necessarily need tankers - strategic bombers can do it on internal fuel. It just won't be full payload, but payload will still be substantial, and much depends on strike profile. Case example - Soviet Tu-160s could strike CONUS w/o refuel only with 1 bay of missiles (second bay was taken by soft fuel tank), because missiles were shorter ranged and profile had to take into account penetration.Sustained strikes to CONUS by air means having bombers and tankers over the pacific effectively 24/7. It's far harder to do than you think it is. Nuclear strikes are comparatively much easier because you only need to do it once.
I think you're for some reason denying rotation to units which rotate in less than 24h(and are overall relatively invulnerable), yet prefer ones which take a month, and which have to penetrate both ASW belts and play checkers with death after their very visible strikes every single time.SSGNs are capable of being constantly rotated in and have deep magazines to do major damage during it's rotation. Provided you have a sufficiently large fleet.