Well it all started with making bold claims that Chinese missiles can be track on the ground in a large country like China. Everything else I've pointed to is also bold claims. I used Kosovo as an example of how hard it is to track what's on the ground even with all of NATO's advanced technology. The F-22 also went through the hype and disputed by their own that stealth wasn't as invincible after all in order to counter Russian and Chinese stealth developments. They said that underwater drone was spying on Chinese submarines. I thought Seawolves were doing that as hyped. It's irrelevant what other possible uses for that underwater drone. Seawolves were already and more capable of doing that job being as undetectable as hyped. They say Seawolves and other US subs are following Chinese subs every step of the way. If that's true they don't need that drone. If they need it it's because there's a limitation that falls short of the hype to what they can do with those subs. Of course the media might be misrepresenting the facts but a lot people believe in their spin and that's what I'm arguing against. Yeah the drone angle isn't confirmed like the others, but it smells like the same hype if you believe Seawolves are stalking Chinese subs every step of the way.
So is your argument is that the media narrative surrounding these military topics which try to depict China as having drastically inferior capabilities are inaccurate and overhyped?
Because I agree with you there; I do think the media narrative often isn't accurate and they build hype and spin, but I disagree with some of your individual premises, specifically that about the UUV.
There's no reason why they could not use UUVs to conduct surveillance alongside SSNs (and for goodness' sake, there are more SSNs outside only the Seawolf class), nor do we know if the UUV was only undergoing testing or maybe if it only conducts a certain type of surveillance while SSNs conduct other types (or any other possible plausible reason why it is there), so the presence of the UUV says nothing about whether SSNs are able to conduct surveillance missions in the past, present, or future.