I don't want to belabor this too much further since I seem to be on an island of one defending the DF-17 Plus, so I'll address some of the feedback and then drop this.
If you genuinely believe what you're writing, do you really want me to write another tirade in the idiocy of chauvinism and triumphalism?
Yes, I do genuinely believe what I'm writing and we can disagree without the ad hominem. You (and several other people here) think I underestimate America and that China should continue to be risk-averse in miltech development, I think you overestimate America and that China should be more risk-tolerant.
I wouldn't count your chickens on that yet.
This is not the America of Kelly Johnson, this is the America of Palmer Luckey. I'll leave it at that.
There are alternative approaches to spreading the R&D costs through broader application, beyond merely procuring more DF-17s. These are also existing platforms.
Right, that's why I don't understand this criticism of the DF-17's development. You are going to have to address a variety of problems related to any HGV, be it an exquisite scalpel or penny-a-pop spam. For example, let's consider cooling the sensor aperture - you might need to design intricate cooling channels and use a material tolerant of high temperatures with excellent heat conductivity for the windows.
In the case of the cooling channels, designing them might be difficult and expensive, but once that engineering work is done it's just a matter of loading up the CAD files in the 3D printer and running the job. That part could go into any HGV. In the case of the window, you might have the option of going with sapphire or diamond with a performance tradeoff that'll degrade accuracy with the former. My view is go with the diamond because the developing supply chain and industrial policy will eventually bring the costs of the material down, as is already happening with synthetic diamond (check out the price declines just this year).
Why settle for a decapitation strike when you can instead annihilate every cell in the target body and end the fight there and then instead of just endlessly cutting fresh heads off the proverbial hydra?
I had in mind the "political" leadership, not the military. Yes, that goes against the laws of armed conflict, but those only apply to states. Taiwan is not a state.
Russia would be having a much easier time of it if Ukraine and its backers didn't have a figure to rally around in Zelensky.
The far larger problem for the US is atrophied industrial base and lack of trained manufacturing labor, not lack of engineers and scientists.
The US can't compare with China in either. In scientists and engineers, China enjoys a 5-10x advantage in STEM graduates and it's starting to tell in the university rankings (the ones that weight research output, not "prestige"), and the number of published papers and patents. It's severe but not the ROFLstomp advantage China has in manufacturing like the 220x advantage in shipbuilding.
Also, a lot of the STEM workers in America are boomers nearing retirement. There's many an anecdote of the 70 year-old millionaire engineer keeping an antique system underpinning the entire company going because he's the only one who knows how and there's no one to replace him.
No, that is not how engineering is done. China has thus far done a good job of setting practical requirements, waiting for technologies to mature, not rushing platforms into service/serial production, and making the correct engineering tradeoffs.
There are problems with the overly cautious, risk avoidant approach as well. The WS-15 followed this model and had to be redesigned from scratch at least once because the result was mediocre and the industrial base had advanced faster than the designers anticipated. I think that was the right approach at the time because it wasn't reasonable to predict back then that China would become the juggernaut it is today.
Given that China now has all these advantages, I think it can and should adopt the mentality of the early Cold War US and just fund a bunch of moonshots.