Also, what kind of BMD are you talking about here, GMD? There aren't exactly many interceptors to saturate thereMost of our planning isn't based around warhead count, it's centered on exchange salvo bandwidth to BMD saturability.
Also, what kind of BMD are you talking about here, GMD? There aren't exactly many interceptors to saturate thereMost of our planning isn't based around warhead count, it's centered on exchange salvo bandwidth to BMD saturability.
This.
The tepid response to Doklam emboldened the Jai Hinds to attempt Galwan, which led to bloodshed anyway.
that would be inconsistent with all other silo basings that we've seen from US and Russia, and from recently declared LoW posture from Yang Chengjun. but it's still possible.Actually yes, it's extremely reasonable to expect the majority of those to be decoys. Each and every one would have to be disabled or destroyed in order to eliminate the PLARF's second-strike capability from remaining silos, which reduces single salvo deliverable yield to other counterforce targets. Blowing up nuclear silos is really hard, and they serve as an extremely effective "sponge," imposing serious virtual attrition on salvo targeting and weaponeering profiles.
They did construct many decoy silos IIRC for the DF-5s so it's possible. But I highly doubt *most* of the new silos would be left unfilled.that would be inconsistent with all other silo basings that we've seen from US and Russia, and from recently declared LoW posture from Yang Chengjun. but it's still possible.
Then it would be the battle between the Chinese silo builders of the silos and CIA analysts.They have analysts in CIA whose sole job is to decipher which ones are fake and real ....
Interesting guess, what would you be basing it on? Would that be actual warheads or payloads (i.e. multiple warheads in one package)If it's worth anything, it's not like we know either - but most folks here privately estimate anywhere from 400 to 550 warheads, though we also presume the majority of these aren't mated to delivery vehicles, and are instead stored in hardened facilities to facilitate a more survivable second-strike capability aboard road-mobile TELs. Most of our planning isn't based around warhead count, it's centered on exchange salvo bandwidth to BMD saturability.