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World News See other World News Articles Title: How Good Is China's J-20 Stealth Fighter Jet? By Richard Bitzinger, an independent international security analyst. He was previously a senior fellow with the Military Transformations Program at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS) in Singapore. First published in the Epoch Times. How good is Chinas most advanced fighter jet, the J-20? The J-20 is a fifth-generation combat aircraft, which ostensibly puts it in the same league as the U.S. F-22 and F-35. Fifth-generation fighters have certain common characteristics: very low visibility (stealth), the ability to fly at supersonic speeds without using an afterburner (called supercruise), and, most importantly, a highly advanced radar and suite of avionics and onboard computers for networked data fusion, enabling situational awareness in the battlespace. Theoretically, a fifth-generation fighter jet is nearly invisible to ground-based air defenses and other aircraft, and it can detect and attack threats from far away. At the moment, most modern air forces fly what we call fourth-generation or fourth-generation-plus (4G+) combat aircraft. Fourth-generation fighters include the latest versions of the American-made F-16 and F/A-18 and Russias Su-30, while the Anglo-German-Italian-Spanish Eurofighter Typhoon, the French Rafale, and the Swedish Gripen are examples of 4G+ combat aircraft. Technologically, fourth-generation and 4G+ fighters date from the 1970s and 1980s, although most have undergone significant upgrades over the years. All are multirole aircraft, capable of both air-to-air and air-to-ground missions. They are highly maneuverable, use fly-by-wire flight controls, and can launch fire-and-forget active radar-guided air-to-air missiles. 4G+ fighters, in addition, possess a modicum of stealth and improved avionics, such as an active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar. In general, most fourth-generation and 4G+ fighter jets are basically the same. A Venn diagram of their capabilities would show a lot of overlap. The difference is mainly in the number of engines they have (one or two). So how does the J-20 stack up? In the first place, the J-20 is certainly the best fighter jet in the Peoples Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF), but this is a skinniest-kid-at-fat-camp kind of argument. The best of the rest of the PLAAF fighter force are the J-10an indigenously developed combat aircraft initiated in the 1980sand the J-11, basically a reverse-engineered Soviet Su-27, a plane that first flew in the 1990s. An armed Chinese J-11 fighter jet, a 1992 copy of the Russian Su-27, flies near an American patrol aircraft over the South China Sea in international airspace on Aug. 19, 2014. (U.S. Navy Photo/Released) Although heavily upgraded over the years, the J-10 and J-11 are barely fourth-generation fighters. Going up against comparable combat aircraft flown by better-trained pilots (such as Taiwanese F-16s or Japanese F-15s), these planes would be in a decidedly perilous situation. Hence, the PLAAFs need for the J-20. According to the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), the J-20 is an advanced multirole stealth fighter fulfilling both air-to-air and air-to-ground combat roles. CSIS quotes a 2016 report by the U.S. Department of Defense that states that the J-20 represents a critical step in Chinas efforts to develop advanced aircraft to improve its regional power projection capabilities and to strengthen its ability to strike regional airbases and facilities. A U.S. Naval War College report adds that the J-20, once deployed, would immediately become the most advanced aircraft deployed by any East Asian Power. That said, what we knowand just as importantly, what we do not knowabout the J-20 throws a bit of cold water on these assessments. In the first place, details about the J-20s design undercut assertions about its apparent stealthiness. For one thing, the plane is hugemore than 2 meters (about 6.5 feet) longer than the U.S. F-22and it uses canards (winglets) at the front of the airframe for improved maneuverability. Both of these features make the J-20 more detectable by radar. Moreover, the J-20 appears to lack nozzle designs that reduce the heat signature coming from its engine exhaust. Therefore, the J-20 may only be stealthy from the front, according to aviation expert Richard Aboulafia, The J-20 is also likely underpowered. Early versions used a small Russian engine, which was later replaced by the indigenous WS-20 turbofan; this engine, however, has had its share of teething problems. Its possible, therefore, that the J-20 is incapable of supercruise. Secondly, what we cannot see should also leave us questioning the aircrafts capabilities. In particular, we cannot know what kind of radar, sensors, avionics, and computers that are internal to the J-20 or how good they are; we mainly infer from what we know about other fifth-generation fighters. CSIS, for example, claims that the J-20 is slated to carry a variety of advanced systems, including an [AESA radar], a chin-mounted infrared/electro-optic search and track sensor, and a passive electro-optical detection system that will provide 360-degree spherical coverage around the aircraft. This assessment, however, is based on the argument that comparable systems can be found on the U.S. F-35. An F-35 fighter jet pilot and crew prepare for a mission at Al-Dhafra Air Base in the United Arab Emirates, on Aug. 5, 2019. (Staff Sgt. Chris Thornbury/U.S. Air Force via AP) Its impossible, short of espionage, to know how good the systems inside the J-20 actually are (Western intelligence agencies might be privy to some of this information, but theyre not talking). Its highly likely, however, that avionics on the F-22 and F-35especially those systems for sensor and data fusion, situational awareness and connectivityare head-and-shoulders above those of the J-20. Consequently, analysts like Aboulafia and John Venable of Heritage Foundation believe that the U.S. fifth-generation fighter would easily best the J-20 in a modern air-to-air contest, which is based on long-range first look/first shoot kinds of engagements, rather than any kind of Top Gun dogfight. The F-22, with its superior stealth, radar, and precision weapons, would destroy [the J-20] instantly, according to Aboulafia. Its likely that the Chinese are aware of the J-20s shortcomings, and perhaps thats why the PLAAF has so far fielded only limited numbers of the aircraft. Still, its as dangerous to under-guesstimate the potential of the J-20 as it is to exaggerate its capabilities. The PLA has been able to appreciably narrow its military-technological gap with the West over the past 20 years or so. Its incumbent on the West, therefore, to keep moving the technological goalposts in order to stay comfortably ahead. Poster Comment: Chinese weapons and soldiers are both highly over rated. Though their copies of Russian missiles are definitely better than ours. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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