plawolf
Lieutenant General
The British QE carriers aren't exactly similar to USN carriers, either in the type of aircraft they're expected to embark or configuration. Sure, they're more similar to USN carriers than the Invincible class were, but they're still quite distinctive from the Nimitz class.
Nor do any of us know exactly what capabilities the PLAN wants their carriers to have, however I wouldn't be surprised if their ultimate goal was to attain similar capabilities to nimitz/ford sized supercarriers, and I think it makes sense for them to try and leverage a proven configuration.
I agree, the one consistent characteristic of the PLA as a whole has been their pragmatism.
It has been one of their greatest strengths, and is a cornerstone that has allowed them to make such rapid gains in recent decades.
The PLA's general philosophy is that they are happy to put their pride aside and learn by copying others until they have the experience and expertise to start forging their own path.
The PLAN has not been coy about using the USN as the basis for its carrier development, going so far as to replicate the deck crew colour code and protective gear.
The Liaoning is effectively new built in terms of fixtures and fittings, but its Soviet roots can never be changed, and I think that will become a hinderance to the PLAN if they wish to pursue American style carrier ops.
As such, I think it would be a mistake to make a slight modified Liaoning as the first indigenous Chinese built carrier. Even the Russians are ditching the Varyag design philosophy with their own planned next gen carriers, so that is clearly an evolutionary dead end. So it makes little sense for the PLAN to sink any more time and resources going down that path.
Instead, the PLAN would be far better off adapting the British QEII class design, or even the old Kitty Hawk design.
Such a path would allow the PLAN to effectively emulate and evaluate the USN style of carrier ops and then add their own unique flourishes based on their operational experience, assets and requirements.
However, I think there is a very good chance that the first Chinese nuclear supercarrier will look a lot like a Ford class.
The Americans didn't just design their carriers willy nilly. The Ford class is the culmination and distillation of a century of US carrier operations and design history.
As the saying goes, form follows function, and just as many modern fighters looks broadly alike, because the requirements they were designed to meet led their respective design teams down the same design paths, I expect the Chinese ship designers to come up with the same general layout as the Americans when it comes to designing a nuclear supercarrier.
I would not expect a Chinese carriers to differ significantly from American carriers until at least the second or third generation of Chinese nuclear carriers.