The word "dedicated" is somewhat bolted on. You're using that to go blast mainstream media when we know that mainstream media often gets technical details wrong. The problem I have with you and latenlazy is the power game and the search for authority, i.e, the desire to say "based on our sources and our analysis so and so shouldn't be trusted". The downplaying of particular sources and particular agents is somewhat arrogant and is a "power move", in the same way certain politicians or organs going on about "fake news" is likewise a power move.
As for the J-20 in general, here's another simple explanation about the definition of an interceptor. This is from a Western magazine covering the Eurofighter:
Essentially, beginning as an interceptor does not mean that an aircraft cannot transform as the airframe and subsystems change over the development life. I've made a big deal about how the AMK with LERX and strakes have substantially improved the Eurofighter's performance. Likewise, the Eurofighter Typhoon, as subsystems developed, became capable and proficient in ground attack as well as a more capable dogfighter.
The F-16 is another strong example. The earliest F-16s were analogues to the MiG-29, intending the F-16 to be a short-range point defense fighter. The F-16 eventually evolved into a lightweight strike fighter that sacrificed its wing loading for better strike performance and range.
In the J-20's case, the range from the WS-15s at a predicted 180 kN and the WS-10 / AL-31FN at 130-140kN roughly maps to a 26% reduction in thrust. Crippling the thrust of such a fighter is going to severely degrade maneuverability; AoA / Drag equations imply something around a 1:1 ratio (not exact, depends on aircraft) in terms of drag increase on alpha. This implies that the J-20 has lost about 26% sustained turn rate. The initial J-20s, provided that they're powered with WS-10 / AL-31FN can rightly be described as interceptors for this reason.
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I see something STRONGLY nationalistic and problematic in the desire to call the J-20 an air superiority aircraft. You can't simply go to the Song Wencong design documents to claim that the J-20 is intended to dogfight (because that's how you get out of the interceptor arguments most strongly) because the MiG-31, likewise, was designed for higher maneuverability than the MiG-25 it was based off. You have to acknowledge the basic airframe characteristics and shown performance (if we've seen the J-20 run on afterburners, the afterburner excuse is no longer valid for merely average or 4th gen maneuverability).
I'd also argue that this approach is foolish. The issue with the "J-20 is an interceptor" narrative isn't that the interceptor appellation is wrong, but that the notion that interceptors can't successfully challenge air air superiority and strike aircraft is a mistaken one. The label of interceptor or fighter-interceptor more rightly describes the airframe's role and characteristics at this point in the development cycle, and trying to change the designation instead of pointing out that interceptors (especially if you note trends in interceptor design toward more subsonic maneuverability) can beat strike and air superiority fighters is asking the reader to suspend logic. The conclusion the outside reader is more likely to come to is "the J-20 might have been designed to be an air superiority aircraft, but the designers failed". They can point to, for instance, the fact that the J-20 lacks a gun as evidence, or that the J-20 has not shown the show-stopping acrobatics of the F-22 or Su-57 equipped with TVC.
What is more effective in asserting the J-20's credibility is instead pointing out that interceptors are effective against American strike aircraft as shown by the MiG-25 record in Desert Storm and that there exist tactics wherein the MiG-31 can defeat older F-15s.
@Hyperwarp :
The J-20 is likely to be able to hit at least Mach 2.7 with WS-15s if it can hit Mach 2.5 now. There is literally no way for the J-20 to defeat the F-35 on a strategic level if it does not leverage its speed advantage over the F-35.