we have thoroughly discuss this.is H-20 still on the track or had replace by J-36? and Xian more focus on their JH-XX
JH-XX doesn't exist neither H-20 replaced by J-36..
H-20 has redesigned for future combat.
we have thoroughly discuss this.is H-20 still on the track or had replace by J-36? and Xian more focus on their JH-XX
If we look at the geography of the USA there is an ocean of water to its west and east. There are 2 very weak nations to the north and south. There are No military threats anywhere within a 4,000 km radius of its borders. Because of this the US military can focus 100% on long distance power projection and ignore short range defense.
China has an "opposite" geography.
There's at least a half a dozen nations, relatively close by, that can potentially become hostile in a future war.
It makes no sense to be preoccupied with the idea of running 12,000 km across the Pacific ocean to hit a long distance target when you literally have a half a dozen rivals that can hamstring your efforts before you even reach 4,000 km out.
I don't understand the fascination some people have with "hitting" the USA.
How come there isn't a fascination with China convincing all the east Asians nations to turn their backs away from the USA and instead chose military neutrality? If China succeeds in this, then the USA loses its military influence in Asia and must compete on its economic merit which we all know isn't very good these days.
They have been upgraded, that's why there's you know the new variants like H-6N and H-6K and the latest variants are still in production so retirement of the overall platform isn't coming any time soon. As for what they are used for, well what bombers are typically used for, delivering ordinance, in this case mostly missiles. You can make a case that most of that mission can be better handled by something like J-16 but H-6 is a cost effective proven platform and for some stuff like ALBM those might be too big for J-16. So H-6 is definitely not going anywhere for at least another decade or two.Is there a plan for H-6 retirement at all? I mean, what are they even used for anymore? To my knowledge they haven't been heavily upgraded either. Could they be sold?
Interesting fact on old long life bombers.Is there a plan for H-6 retirement at all? I mean, what are they even used for anymore? To my knowledge they haven't been heavily upgraded either. Could they be sold?
The H-6K and H-6N are newly manufactured. They are cheap to produce and cheap to maintain. Supposedly they have very high availability and they can be cheap cruise missile carriers that get launched outside of enemy air defense bubbles.Is there a plan for H-6 retirement at all? I mean, what are they even used for anymore? To my knowledge they haven't been heavily upgraded either. Could they be sold?
While the U.S. does have the ability t o hit the Chinese with our bombers and the Chinese do not with regard to the CONUS, this ability comes with a very big string attached. Today, we have interests in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines. The moment a fleet of bombers start attacking China, we stand to lose all these areas. The asymmetry of power in the Western Pacific in favor of China constrains the hands of the U.S., making these bombers useless when it comes to attacking mainland China. I agree with others that developing the H-20 is lower in priority as the Chinese rightly focus on first and second island chains.
There are plenty of targets on CONUS that you can prosecute with a relatively small amount of munitions. Ships in dock, aircraft on land, ammo depots... each loss will be felt keenly due to US' ailing industrial backbone.This. China needs the ability to visit strategic levels of devastation on countries hosting US military bases near China. Check the amount of bombs the US casually uses in their bombing campaigns, you need enough to make Japan look like Iraq. Ballistic missiles will not suffice.
Re a bombing campaign vs CONUS, you may as well just use ICBMs. I don't consider it realistic unless they are carrying nukes.