sometimes i guess you just gotta put it to the realworld test to see if the theories shake out
just like the indians did haha...
just like the indians did haha...
He is still think about WW2, when retooling a lot easier.....US don't even have the capacity to refine the rare earth metal for aircraft Avionics, radars etc.You vastly underestimate the complexity of aerospace manufacturing if you think Boeing factories can easily retool to produce military aircraft. Military aircraft production is so specialized that even switching production from one fighter model to another within the same generation requires 70-80% of the tooling and machinery to be replaced.
You think steel and chemicals are low end manufacturing that are irrelevant for war? Oh my, I don't even know to respond. Good luck equipping your military without steel and chemicals.
Even in WW2, aircraft production was predominantly scaled up via the building or expansion of existing factories rather than retooling. And even in WW2, where there was a far larger degree of parts and tooling commonality amongst different fighter models, often new production lines came online faster than older production lines could be retooled.He is still think about WW2, when retooling a lot easier.....US don't even have the capacity to refine the rare earth metal for aircraft Avionics, radars etc.
Nukes ensure neither China nor the US can be defeated in total war. Only victory in a limited war would be possible for either side, in which case you need to define the war goals of each side before any discussion on the outcome can take place.
Thank you for confirming you don't really understand what tyranny of distance is.
If retooling civillian factories is that hard, then China is in even bigger trouble because China can also only rely on its existing factories for producing military grade stuff.You vastly underestimate the complexity of aerospace manufacturing if you think Boeing factories can easily retool to produce military aircraft. Military aircraft production is so specialized that even switching production from one fighter model to another within the same generation requires 70-80% of the tooling and machinery to be replaced.
You think steel and chemicals are low end manufacturing that are irrelevant for war? Oh my, I don't even know to respond. Good luck equipping your military without steel and chemicals.
In terms of critical mineral reserves used for military production, China and Russia are number 1 and 2 and together own 46% of global reserves (considering 18 relevant minerals, including tungsten, chromium, zinc, copper, titanium, bauxite, etc)China is also really reliant on raw materials from distant countries, without those raw materials it will be very hard Chinese factories to function. US can easily blockade China using the choke points.
First, the probability of Korea being involved is effectively zero. Secondly, Japan at most can satisfy perhaps 20% of the materiel needs for the US war effort, and would require 100% of the raw materials used to be imported across very long sea routes subject to interdiction by PLAN subsurface forces.Distance is a tyranny if you have to bring supplies from distant places. For US, the advantage is that Korea and Japan are essentially part of their own empire. They can use the industry there as they want. They can produce the spare parts, fix the planes and ships there and even produce new weapons. Yes, US will have to bring a lot of supplies from continental US, but having Korea and Japan as vassal reduces the need for doing that quite a bit.
You think the PLA navy and Air Force will just sally out to get destroyed for no operational reason? No, they would just stay put in port and over Chinese air space. You also failed to consider the impossibility of garnering domestic support, let alone support from allies for such a nonsense war goal. Discussing which side would prevail is meaningless without the context of a realistic conflict scenario with clearly defined war aims for both sides.Nukes ensure your country is not destroyed or controlled by your enemy. Because then you might want to commit suicide and launch nukes against them. But Nukes does not prevent US from completely destroying China's navy and air force with conventional weapons. As long as US does not invade China, I don't think China will commit suicide and launch nukes. I also think if China comprehensively defeats US forces in Asia and takes over Japan and Korea, US will not launch nukes, cause again, no point launching a suicide bomb just cause you lost 2 vassals.
As others have pointed out, China is currently outproducing the US in every single category of military good.If retooling civillian factories is that hard, then China is in even bigger trouble because China can also only rely on its existing factories for producing military grade stuff.
Other posters have already adequately addressed this issue, please read before repeating this nonesense. US might as well send target drones instead of old rusted airframes lacking modern avionics. Due to China's 10 fold advantage in AESA production, J-7 and J-8s outfitted with AESAs and PL-15 would have a turkey shoot against legacy US fighters with 40 yr old electronics.I discussed before, China lacks the vast reserve of retired planes, tanks and other stuff US has. China also cannot force its vast vassal empire to give up their weapons for own use, but US can
Again, read the statistics other posters have already shared on this topic. Despite spending much less on defense, China already outproduces the US in all categories of military production. China also has a military-civil policy, which will enable China to scale up production of certain categories of critical military goods at a much more rapid rate than the US.That kind of manufacturing capacity simply doesn't exist anymore because China only spends 1.5% of GDP on defense. Before WW2, most countries spent 5-10% of GDP on defense. They also fielded armies and air forces with 20-30 thousand planes, tanks and so on. So, they had the factory capacity.
Now, China lacks that capacity. They have the civillian manufacturing capacity, but as you said, its really hard to retool that. So, US will likely be able to bring online more retired planes, missiles and forced donation from allies than whatever China can produce.
What you said is not wrong. However, If a war were to be fought between the U.S. and China, there are going to be two types of wars.When you look at history of past world wars and european wars between great powers, you will understand the lengths Greats Powers can go to preserve their dominance. Its actually naive to think US will only bring a certain percentage of its force to a fight against China. If US and China fights, it will be world war 3.
That means US will try to use every single leverage it has anywhere to try to bring China down. So, not just active force US has, I expect US to bring back retired F-15, F-16 whatever planes US has in its boneyard.
I expect US to force its European allies to fight as well and I expect some fanatic countries like Poland and UK to join for sure. The ones that dont join, I atleast I expect US to bring all the F-35s, F-16s whatever they have in their arsenal and supply to US.
US for example forced Pakistan to supply artillery to Ukraine. So, in a world war 3 which is much more existential, US might ask Saudis to supply F-15 to US to make up losses.
We need to understand the comprehensive hold US and the western empire has on the world. Every country dependent on US for buying arms or protection is a vassal and US will use that influence during the war against China.
Can China's reserve of older J-7, J-6 compare against 3000 F-15/F-16 coming back from retirement or supplied by its vassals? US has much bigger pool of retired fighter jet pilots than China. So, they can rapidly expand their air force with retired pilots.
Yes, China has more manufacturing capacity now. But US has comprehensive dominance on many countries and it will use that dominance to bring in more supplies and forces. China may not be able to match that reserve force with manufacturing new planes alone.
China is still too weak against US and it comprehensive empire.
Whats an ammo dump ? Like ammo depot?One or two more batteries of HQ-9 definitely won’t hurt though. But agreed that long range missiles and drones cause very limited damage (unless targeting a large ammo dump, which didn’t happen in this conflict)
Yeah that’s what I meant. Given that majority of Indian ammo depots are well within Pakistani MRLS range in Kashmir, Pakistan really held back from hitting Indian troops in that region.Whats an ammo dump ? Like ammo depot?
First of all, I hope the photos are real (I'm not good at identifying PS photos). Then the guy in the first photo doesn't look like Pakistani. Finally, according to the hit sites demonstrated by Pakistan, the five scores should belong to five different jets. If you paint all five scores on one jet, it doesn't seem fair.Is this going to Paris?