PLA strike strategies in westpac HIC

AndrewS

Brigadier
Registered Member
The problem is that in a major conflict like that using SRBMs or MRBMs with conventional warheads would not be cost effective.
Let alone ICBMs or the likes. I doubt China even has conventional warheads for ICBMs.

The V-2 was not effective because it had little accuracy and next to no destructive potential in relation to its cost.

You will have to take cost benefit into consideration when you use those missiles. So let us say you use the tactical nukes to hit US bases in the Pacific or carrier groups. I think that would be the most likely scenario.

If we're talking about SRBMs or MRBMs, the ranges are up to 2000km or so.
The majority of the 1st Island Chain lies within 1200km (eg. all of Korea, Japan, Taiwan and half of the Philippines)
That is workable distance for aircraft to launch regular strikes using lower cost munitions, after any initial missile strikes.

And if we look at the maths for IRBMs and ICBMs, the approximate costs are as follows:

ICBM ($60 Million) versus ($75 Million) per GMD interceptor x2
DF-26 IRBM ($21 Million) versus ($11-18 Million) per THAAD interceptor x2

Then you have the costs of the ABM radar and other equipment. A THAAD battery with 48 interceptors costs up to $3 Billion in total

So missile strikes do generally work out at all levels ie. SRBM, MRBM, IRBM, ICBM.
Particularly if they are used against airbase runways and/or use cluster munitions to destroy any large aircraft on the ground.
 

FairAndUnbiased

Brigadier
Registered Member
I think there's a higher chance of the US turning to nuclear war if the US is to lose a conventional war to the point of its economic and hegemonic redemption is untenable by the remaining military industry and conventional forces, than it would be for China to turn to nuclear war if China is to lose a conventional war to a similar degree.

This isn't just losing factories and military resources but a devastation of its military to the point it cannot support its prior state and accumulated power.

Why? personal speculation based on cultural tendencies. Chinese generally are indoctrinated to think and behave patiently and for the long term goals. Stumbling with conventional defeat is not justification to end everything. American and western cultures and people are generally all out all in types. Hyper aggressive and assertiveness is more then norm than the exception. Even with individuals. Of course evidence to the contrary exist like with everything but if we're so careless as to generalise with this, then come on... the underdog taking a decades long stumble and pushing the red button or the privileged class out of touch after centuries of dominance (slowly ending in the last 50 years), much too fine and precious to deal with struggles and certainly not happy to accept defeat and a climb down?

This is quite removed from the mechanisms of escalation to nuclear exchange though. We're ignoring the fact that it would be impossible to tell or ascertain truth from intentions of the other party. Nuclear escalation could be triggered by myriad factors and forces not simply conventional defeat on devastating scale. Light or mild losses aren't enough to even consider nuclear exchange except for the US since China can deal with light or mildly heavy losses and not be in a significantly altered position.

The US taking even insignificant but noteworthy conventional losses if China were not to would show its relative inabilities and only enhance that cycle of decline while boosting China's even if the diplomatic and political dialogue around the world be full of various copiums and the usual narrative spin or downright condemnation without pause for understanding and taking in all the nuance i.e. this is at the very least something the US is doing to itself.

It would be the US that could not stand to live in such a world and potentially (however remote) trigger what they might believe to be a winnable escalation. It all depends on which people are in charge and the pressures they have on their shoulders. And of course many other factors ... old men convinced of virgin blessed afterlife (or whatever personal belief) may be more willing to push the red button for example. Especially if they feel they are righteous in their own mind. China as bad and insane or unstable as it could be is simply FAR from this.
I disagree in terms of psychology. Actually, westerners aren't the ones who go all in, Asians are.

Watch western high school bullying movies like US The Heathers or even Arab movies like Al Rawabi School for Girls vs. Asian high school bullying movies like Chinese Better Days (少年的你)and Korean movie Pluto (冥王星).

In The Heathers the bully mean girls just keep pushing the victims around until they can't take it and fight back. They start slow by spreading rumors, then escalate to small violence, then finally killing one. You can see that they follow a chain of escalation where every step is tit for tat. In Al Rawabi School for Girls, Miriam gets jumped, framed as gay and humiliated. She slowly escalates and revenge on each of her bullies, first by humilating one by tricking her into taking a revealing selfie, then getting one expelled by exposing her at a party serving alcohol, then finally getting one killed in an honor killing.

In Better Days the bully mean girls starts off by forcing a girl to commit suicide. Then they gang up and beat Chen Nian, the protagonist. She vents to her semi-boyfriend Xiao Bei, who then ambushes them with a knife, a huge escalation from bare fists. The bullies then ambush Chen Nian and strip her right before gaokao. The bullies then mysteriously end up missing from school and are later found dead.

In Pluto, the main character Kim Joon gets arrested for murder because one of his bullies is found dead in the woods. But there was no proof he ever did it, he refused to confess, and he lets go. A few days later, tricks his bullies into the school basement and walks in with a bomb.

Asians will accept humiliation up to a degree, but when pushed too far they'll go all out for revenge.

Westerners will escalate slowly.

This is reflected in Chinese defense policy too. It is why US and Russia both like to poke a little and test the waters with a spectrum of use of force and do slow escalation, hybrid war, gray zone warfare, etc while for China the philosophy is 牵一发而动全身 - moving a hair will move the whole body.
 

AndrewS

Brigadier
Registered Member
I disagree in terms of psychology. Actually, westerners aren't the ones who go all in, Asians are.

Watch western high school bullying movies like US The Heathers or even Arab movies like Al Rawabi School for Girls vs. Asian high school bullying movies like Chinese Better Days (少年的你)and Korean movie Pluto (冥王星).

In The Heathers the bully mean girls just keep pushing the victims around until they can't take it and fight back. They start slow by spreading rumors, then escalate to small violence, then finally killing one. You can see that they follow a chain of escalation where every step is tit for tat. In Al Rawabi School for Girls, Miriam gets jumped, framed as gay and humiliated. She slowly escalates and revenge on each of her bullies, first by humilating one by tricking her into taking a revealing selfie, then getting one expelled by exposing her at a party serving alcohol, then finally getting one killed in an honor killing.

In Better Days the bully mean girls starts off by forcing a girl to commit suicide. Then they gang up and beat Chen Nian, the protagonist. She vents to her semi-boyfriend Xiao Bei, who then ambushes them with a knife, a huge escalation from bare fists. The bullies then ambush Chen Nian and strip her right before gaokao. The bullies then mysteriously end up missing from school and are later found dead.

In Pluto, the main character Kim Joon gets arrested for murder because one of his bullies is found dead in the woods. But there was no proof he ever did it, he refused to confess, and he lets go. A few days later, tricks his bullies into the school basement and walks in with a bomb.

Asians will accept humiliation up to a degree, but when pushed too far they'll go all out for revenge.

Westerners will escalate slowly.

This is reflected in Chinese defense policy too. It is why US and Russia both like to poke a little and test the waters with a spectrum of use of force and do slow escalation, hybrid war, gray zone warfare, etc while for China the philosophy is 牵一发而动全身 - moving a hair will move the whole body.

I think these analogies are a stretch...
 

Mohsin77

Senior Member
Registered Member

Key part is @ minutes 21:50

Analysts in the US are finally coming to the conclusion that the only chance they have to win is to "fire the first shot." As soon as the US detects enough Chinese forces gearing up (probably based on some threshold), the US should be expected to pre-emptively attack, even if the stated Chinese intention is to hold 'exercise drills.' Logically, this makes sense (that's what I'd do), because the US knows that there's no chance of winning decisively if China succeeds in attacking first.

What this means, and going back to something I mentioned in one of the threads, is that the actual Chinese deployments need to be masked, in order to stay below the enemy's pre-emptive threshold and preserve the initiative. 'Large scale exercises' is not good cover if your enemy is planning to pre-emptively launch based on a threshold.

There's obviously a lot of other variables e.g. future US economic conditions might necessitate a drawdown in the Pacific anyway. Also, some of the assumptions in the wargame are still too optimistic for the US. But regardless, whichever side succeeds in attacking first is expected to come out on top, as of right now, in 2022.
 

FairAndUnbiased

Brigadier
Registered Member

Key part is @ minutes 21:50

Analysts in the US are finally coming to the conclusion that the only chance they have to win is to "fire the first shot." As soon as the US detects enough Chinese forces gearing up (probably based on some threshold), the US should be expected to pre-emptively attack, even if the stated Chinese intention is to hold 'exercise drills.' Logically, this makes sense (that's what I'd do), because the US knows that there's no chance of winning decisively if China succeeds in attacking first.

What this means, and going back to something I mentioned in one of the threads, is that the actual Chinese deployments need to be masked, in order to stay below the enemy's pre-emptive threshold and preserve the initiative. 'Large scale exercises' is not good cover if your enemy is planning to pre-emptively launch based on a threshold.

There's obviously a lot of other variables e.g. future US economic conditions might necessitate a drawdown in the Pacific anyway. Also, some of the assumptions in the wargame are still too optimistic for the US. But regardless, whichever side succeeds in attacking first is expected to come out on top, as of right now, in 2022.
Then they lose. Chinese forces can be dispersed and under cover of forest, mountain, urban areas, etc. Their forces are in the open at known harbors and airfields. Chinese forces can move to theater in hours, they need weeks.

In a cold start scenario China has even more of an advantage than a slow escalation.

If US starts to gather forces then PLA will be on high alert anyhow.
 

vincent

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
Analysts in the US are finally coming to the conclusion that the only chance they have to win is to "fire the first shot." As soon as the US detects enough Chinese forces gearing up (probably based on some threshold), the US should be expected to pre-emptively attack, even if the stated Chinese intention is to hold 'exercise drills.' Logically, this makes sense (that's what I'd do), because the US knows that there's no chance of winning decisively if China succeeds in attacking first.
American attacking first would be a godsend. Gives the Chinese government a reason to wipe out all American bases in the first island chain.
PLA can activate its rocket forces and send out naval pickets first, then activate the coastal air defence units (both ground force and air force). PLANAF are in the coastal regions and their readiness should always be decent, thus they can be relied on for preventing surprise attacks.
The moment American attacks, PLARF will attack all American bases in the West Pac
 

Mohsin77

Senior Member
Registered Member
Casually brushing aside the threat of a first strike by an enemy is ill-advised, let alone when that enemy is the US. There are no IADS in existence which can't be saturated by swarms of CMs/BMs/Drones etc. Whichever side launches first will have the advantage, as they will significantly dilute the other side's response.

And by the way:

Chinese forces can be dispersed and under cover of forest, mountain, urban areas, etc.

Yea that's what "masking deployments" means. That's what I've been arguing as a necessary part of the War Plan, in order to preserve cover. This isn't a defensive play (you can't permanently keep formations hidden) but an offensive play. These positions needs to be prepared, and the infrastructure and logistics mapped out as part of the war plan beforehand. The surge to their deployment points will also need to be masked and can be done slowly.
 
Last edited:

vincent

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
Casually brushing aside the threat of a first strike by an enemy is ill-advised, let alone when that enemy is the US. There are no IADS in existence which can't be saturated by swarms of CMs/BMs/Drones etc. Whichever side launches first will have the advantage, as they will significantly dilute the other side's response.
Why do you think the Americans can move thousands of CMs/BMs/Drones etc. to the West Pac region without anyone knowing?
 

Mohsin77

Senior Member
Registered Member
Why do you think the Americans can move thousands of CMs/BMs/Drones etc. to the West Pac region without anyone knowing?

How are you so sure they don't already have this capacity in theater?

I don't understand this bravado attitude of invincibility that you have. The idea that only you are capable of cleverness, while the enemy will never be able to seize the initiative is quite dangerous, and frankly ridiculous. Especially when a first strike is openly being considered in the US.

This whole thread is about China's first wave options. Why would you assume that it's impossible for the enemy to launch its own first wave first? Never underestimate your enemy.
 
Top