Is it practical to take container ships, load them with missile containers, and have them operate as arsenal ships with minimal crew retraining?
I expect the bottleneck will be the number of missiles that can be produced, rather than the launch platforms.
Trying to mass produce aircraft carriers in the middle of a war is very a questionable re-fighting-the-last-war idea. But having a bunch of extra carrier capable J35 on shore ready to replace losses on any carrier air wing might be an idea. I think transferring all the shore based naval aviation to the PLAAF was a
mistake.
So we're 6 months into a war, and it's a stalemate.
The Chinese military can dominate the 1IC and deny the 2IC, but can't reach CONUS.
The US military dominates the areas beyond the 2IC, but can't appreciably penetrate to the 1IC or mainland China.
What happens then?
The only solution for China to win is to build a larger blue-water Navy, which means aircraft carries.
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If you look back to the Napoleonic Wars, we had the French Republic supreme on land, but the British Empire ruling the seas.
Both sides (and their allies) would fight to exhaustion, then agree to a peace to recover, before resuming warfare again.
This went on for a decade, until the British Empire (and allies) won against the French Republic.
But if the French really had focused on building a larger Navy, they could have defeated the Royal Navy and won.
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It's finally gotten through that China has a significantly industrial advantage eg. 232x the shipbuilding capacity.
But what could this actually mean in practice in a full-scale wartime mobilisation?
Hence I thought it interesting to put out a scenario (reminiscent of WW2 America) where China builds 15 carriers simultaneously, immediately followed by another 15
It's something for Japan and America to think about, before saying they have the option of going to war with China.