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buglerbilly
24-05-10, 11:31 AM
New Chinese fighter jet expected by 2018: U.S. intelligence

Jim Wolf
WASHINGTON

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - China is building an advanced combat jet that may rival within eight years Lockheed Martin Corp's F-22 Raptor, the premier U.S. fighter, a U.S. intelligence official said.

The date cited for the expected deployment is years ahead of previous Pentagon public forecasts and may be a sign that China's rapid military buildup is topping many experts' expectations.

"We're anticipating China to have a fifth-generation fighter ... operational right around 2018," Wayne Ulman of the National Air and Space Intelligence Center testified on Thursday to a congressionally mandated group that studies national security implications of U.S.-China economic ties.

"Fifth-generation" fighters feature cutting-edge capabilities, including shapes, materials and propulsion systems designed to make them look as small as a swallow on enemy radar screens.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates had said last year that China "is projected to have no fifth-generation aircraft by 2020" and only a "handful" by 2025.

He made the comments on July 16 to the Economic Club of Chicago while pushing Congress to cap F-22 production at 187 planes in an effort to save billions of dollars in the next decade.

Ulman is China "issues manager" at the center that is the U.S. military's prime intelligence producer on foreign air and space forces, weapons and systems. He said China's military was eyeing options for possible use of force against Taiwan, which Beijing deems a rogue province.

The People's Liberation Army, as part of its Taiwan planning, also is preparing to counter "expected U.S. intervention in support of Taiwan," he told the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission.

He said the PLA's strategy included weakening U.S. air power by striking air bases, aircraft carrier strike groups and support elements if the U.S. stepped in.

Attacks against U.S. "basing infrastructure" in the western Pacific would be carried out by China's air force along with an artillery corps' conventional cruise missile and ballistic missile forces, he said outlining what he described as a likely scenario.

He described China as a "hard target" for intelligence-gathering and said there were a lot of unknowns about its next fighter, a follow-on to nearly 500 4th generation fighters "that can be considered at a technical parity" with older U.S. fighters.

"It's yet to be seen exactly how (the next generation) will compare one on one with say an F-22," Ulman told the commission. "But it'll certainly be in that ballpark."

Lockheed Martin, the Pentagon's No. 1 supplier by sales, is in the early stages of producing another fifth-generation fighter, the F-35. Developed with eight partner countries in three models with an eye to achieving economies of scale and export sales, it will not fly as fast nor as high as the F-22.

Gates has argued that the United States enjoys a lopsided advantage in fighters, warships and other big-ticket military hardware. Some U.S. congressional decisions on arms programs amount to overkill, out of touch with "real-world" threats and today's economic strains, he said in two speeches on the issue this month.

"For example, should we really be up in arms over a temporary projected shortfall of about 100 Navy and Marine strike fighters relative to the number of carrier wings, when America's military possesses more than 3,200 tactical combat aircraft of all kinds?" Gates said on May 8.

"Is it a dire threat that by 2020 the United States will have only 20 times more advanced stealth fighters than China?" he added at the Eisenhower presidential library in Abilene, Kansas.

Geoff Morrell, the Pentagon press secretary, discounted the gap between the timelines cited by Gates and Ulman. He declined to comment on whether China had made enough progress since last July to change intelligence on the next fighter's debut.

Richard Fisher, an expert on the Chinese military at the private International Assessment and Strategy Center, said Gates' decision to end F-22 production is proving to be "potentially very wrong."

"We will need more F-22s if we are going to adequately defend our interests," he said in an interview on Thursday at the hearing.

Bruce Lemkin, a U.S. Air Force deputy undersecretary for ties to foreign air forces, told the commission he had visited Taiwan twice in his official capacity and that the capabilities of Taiwan's aging F-16s, also built by Lockheed, were not "keeping up."

Whether to meet Taiwan's request for advanced F-16 fighters or upgrade the old ones was still under review by the Obama administration, he said before Ulman spoke.

buglerbilly
25-05-10, 05:53 AM
China to provide PAF 4 trainer aircrafts, 60 Million Yuan for training armed forces

Submitted 16 hrs 11 mins ago

The Age, Tuesday, May 25, 2010

China has agreed to provide four trainers aircrafts for Pakistan Air Force and 60 Million Yuan for training purposes of the Armed Forces of Pakistan.

Both countries signed agreements to this effect in Ministry of Defence on Monday. Federal Minister for Defence, Ch. Ahmad Mukhtar, and the Chinese Defence Minister, General Liang Guangile, put signatures on the agreements on behalf of their respective countries.

Earlier, the seventeen members defence delegation, led by General Liang Guangile, Minister for National Defence of China, called on Federal Minister for Defence, Ch.Ahmad Mukhtar, and exchanged views on bilateral defence cooperation, geo-strategic situation of the region and the anti-terror efforts made by Pakistan. Both sides agreed to further increase military cooperation and strategic communication at all levels so as to overcome the challenges being confronted by the two countries. In order to promote and increase interaction and closer collaboration between the Armed Forces of the two countries, the meeting agreed to hold Joint Exercises by the three forces of the two countries. The meeting discussed the security environment of the region and emphasized the need for making joint efforts to weed out terrorism. It was also agreed to share intelligence gathering which was essential for defeating the terrorist elements.

General Liang Guangile assured his counterpart that China would continue to provide military and economic assistance to Pakistan so as to make it a stronger and prosperous country. He further assured that his country would continue to support Pakistan's stance on different issues on every international forum. Appreciating the unflinching support provided by the Peoples Republic of China to Pakistan, the Minister said that Pakistan was highly indebted to China for supporting Pakistan in difficult times and specially its role in developing & strengthening the defence sector of Pakistan. The meeting was attended by Secretary Defence, Lt General Syed Athar Ali (Retd), Rear Admiral Shah Sohail Masood, Additional Secretary, Ministry of Defence, and other senior military and defence officials of Pakistan.

buglerbilly
26-05-10, 05:25 AM
Taiwan issue spurs China build up missile forces

By Bill Gertz

7:12 p.m., Monday, May 24, 2010

China's rapid development of ballistic and cruise missile forces is altering the balance of power in Asia and threatens U.S. forces in a conflict over Taiwan and beyond, according to a forthcoming report.

"Driven in large measure by a Taiwan scenario, China's capacity to conduct a successful aerospace campaign to quickly gain a decisive advantage in the air is growing faster than the defenses that its neighbors, including Taiwan, Japan, perhaps India, and even U.S. forces operating in the Western Pacific, can field," stated the report by the Project 2049 Institute, a private research institute, that highlighted "significant advances" in Chinese air and missile power.

China's long range precision-strike weapons, such as sophisticated conventional ballistic and ground-launched cruise missiles, are "altering the strategic landscape," the report said.

"Due to their speed, precision, and difficulties in fielding viable defenses, these systems — if deployed in sufficient numbers — have the potential to provide the PRC with a decisive military edge in the event of conflict over territorial or sovereignty claims," the report said.

The missiles are also leading other regional militaries to develop similar weapons, the report said.

"China's missile-based strategy has the potential to start an arms race in long range precision strike capabilities, if it hasn't already," Mr. Stokes said in an e-mail.

The report provides one of the first public disclosures of Chinese short-range bases, where an estimated 1,300 missiles are deployed, at Leping, Yongan, Meizhou, Ganzhou, Jinhua; and at medium-range missile bases at Laiwu, Qimen, Kurle, Chizhou, and Chuixiong.

It also identifies for the first time China's ground-launch cruise-missile bases at Liuzhou, Guiyang and Yichun.

China for the first time showed off its new DH-10 land-attack cruise missile during the Oct. 1 military parade.

The report stated that China is moving ahead with development of a ballistic missile that is capable of hitting an aircraft carrier at sea.

China's air forces also are deploying Russian jets, including 76 Su-30s, and older Su-27s, Chinese J-7s, J-11s and a new J-10 fourth-generation fighter. Cruise missile bombers include H-6s.

Wayne Ulman, a China analyst with the National Air and Space Intelligence Center, told a congressional China commission hearing on Thursday that China is building an even more advanced fighter than the J-10 and one that would rival the U.S. F-22 and F-35.

"We're anticipating China to have a fifth-generation fighter … operational right around 2018," Mr. Ulman told the U.S.-China Economic Security and Review Commission.

Fifth-generation warplanes employ anti-radar stealth features, advanced radar and advanced engine technology.

Chinese air and missile power currently is geared toward preparing to fight a conflict over Taiwan, the island off southern China where Chinese Nationalists fled during the civil war of the 1940s. However, the missiles and aircraft being deployed will give China greater power projection that could threaten the United States, Japan, South Korea, Australia and India.

"Over time, the same capabilities arrayed against Taiwan could be brought to bear in pursuit of other sovereignty claims around its periphery," the report said.

The report urges closely monitoring China's air-power development, including improvements in the range and payload of warplanes; increases in the lethality, accuracy, and numbers of conventional ballistic and land attack cruise missiles; and expansion of China's regional surveillance network.

"These indicators have profound strategic implications for the U.S.," the report said. "And given the centrality of the Asia-Pacific to U.S. global interests, China's aerospace development certainly warrants further attention."

The report, Evolving Aerospace Trends in the Asia-Pacific Region, was written by Mark Stokes, a retired Air Force officer, and Ian Easton. It will be made public this week.


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