Re:
You miss two important factors. C&C and aircraft availability rates. With most of the PLAAF's aircraft of Soviet origin, availability is not likely to be of the same level as that for Western aircraft. C&C also is another limiting factor. Aircraft deconfliction etc all come under C&C. When was the last time China demonstrated the ability to control "600 J6 and Q5s with 600 Sukhois/J10s/JH7s attacking" aircraft in the air at one time? By saying that China has more aircraft and thus can generate more sorties you are clearly demonstrating that you do not understand the limitations imposed by practical considerations.
Nope, I did not miss that. I agree that China has not demonstrated the ability to C&C 1000 aircraft in the air at one time. The assumption being that as a consequence it can't. Not having a major exercise on that scale is more an issue of not wanting to scare anybody with such a large scale exercise.
The fact that the former soviet union never executed 1000 aircraft operations never meant that they could not.
Air traffic controllers are already managing significant numbers of aircraft in the air. Whilst I agree that this is not demonstrative, I think it is a fallacy to assume that China would consequently never have more than a few planes in the air at any one time.
It seems that your ignorance has caused you to misunderstand what I said on GPS/LGB bombs with respect to effectiveness of the air force as a whole. Many here, including you, see a GPS bomb and equate that with effectiveness on the scale of the USAF. What you don't understand is that the bomb is just the last actor in a long sequence of events that has to take place, before the bomb ever gets dropped. The US has a capable ISR network to find and geo-locate the targets, it has the experience, procedure and hardware to allow for time-critical targeting, and that allows the guided bombs to be used to greater effectiveness than the PLA which lacks such a ISR network and has not demonstrated any such capabilities.
And what you don't understand is that the ROC still relies heavily on fixed infrastructure which are surveyed by China many times over. I-hawk sites, airfields, radars are not exactly in secret locations. The US has been advising the ROC to go mobile for almost 2 decades already. The latest mobile FPS radar was rejected on the basis that any radar emissions is going to be pretty obvious to the chinese.
With regards to replenishemt of supplies, that's not an assumption. That's an observation in line with mainstream analysts and others who actually have experience with the military and are aware of the problems of logistics.
Of course, the assumption that the USAF sinks every single ship in the Taiwan straits. Have you seen the size of the Chinese merchant fleet? We're not talking about just LSTs here.
For air superiority, I have made no assumption that Taiwan will achieve air superiority. All I said was that China will not be able to achieve it. Taking that position does not mean that I believe Taiwan can achieve air superiority. I believe some PLAAF strikes can get through, but those will be the minority. This is because even if the airbases were fully shut down temporarily, do not forget that the SAM network is still in place. And it is unlikely that they can all be shut down, for the reasons I explained earlier.
Again an assumption. What makes anyone think PLAAF strikes can't get through in the majority. To interdict aircraft missions, you need aircraft in the air. The ultimate assumption is that Taiwan can get sufficient aircraft in the air to stop PLAAF raids with sukhois defending.
Obviously you have not understood and appreciated the consequences of SRBM inaccuracy and limited launcher numbers.
Obviously you have no idea what GPS guidance can do for SRBMs and how many launchers china does have vis a vis the number of airfields taiwan has. We're not talking scuds here going 200 miles offcourse.
If you did any research at all, you would have noticed that the number of possible landing zones is very limited. This means that these sites can be heavily defended. China's inexperience with amphibuous warfare also means that any landing force will have likely take a long time to reorganise as a fighting force on the beach and to build up the iron mountain on shore, assuming they managed to get a foothold on the beach. This will give more than enough time for ROCA reinforcements to arrive. In fact, with Taiwan's E-2C force giving early warning of an incoming amphib fleet, displacement of troops to react to the threat can occur before the landing has even begun. Taiwan's helicopter force also gives a very rapid 'fire-brigade' response force to back up any opposition to the landing force.
Absolutely, every landing site will be heavily defended by 200 group armies with artillery that will obliterate every single landing zone. Of course china never practices amphibious landings as well. China doesn't have helicopters either that can land air mobile troops in areas which doesn't have to be beaches. IL 76s will only air drop onto heavily defended beaches. lol.
Then by your own admission China cannot land sufficient troop numbers yet.
What does one define as sufficient troop number. 200 Mi17s can ferry 4000 troops every 4 hours in a number of waves. How many helicopters does China have? The assumption being that ships are the only way to transport troops?
No they did not. They had impressive equipment that fooled people like you, but their lack of advanced C4I did them in.
Nope, USAF ARM effectiveness and reputation did the Iraqis in. The Iraqis IADS forced the US aircraft to conduct ground attacks from medium altitudes. Read the unclassified reports (I think on GAO website).
What makes you think PLAAF is able to eradicate the ROC's radars and C4I so easily? Yes, I know, you are going to bring out KH-31P and YJ-91. But what makes you think the network is not going to be resilient enough to absorb some losses and keep functioning? Did it also not occur to you that the resources diverted to handling the AD system means resources taken away from the ground support effort?
Nope, I have no such illusions. What I do think is that the PLAAF can degrade ROC coverage and has sufficient capability to reduce air coverage over a sector that will enable landing operations to take place.
I have no doubt that like US planners, Chinese air planners will go down a roster on what are the targets to hit. Dynamically, it will take time.
There. It took the US one month to degrade Iraq's AD system which was more primitive than the ROC's. Yet the PLAAF which is more primitive than the USAF of GW1 can do it easily in a span of a few hours.
There you go with your assumptions again. I never spoke of degrading the entire ROC armed forces within a few hours.
There is a difference between conducting airfield suppression activities and a sector of air defences compared to the entire island of Taiwan.
Amazing. Somehow this applies to Taiwan but not to China, going from the way people here bring out China's new toys and talk as if they are a mature part of China's fighting force. :unknown
Nope, it is an attitude borne out of the desire to avoid MacArthur's ill-fated dismissal of chinese capabilities when launching the Inchon landings. A realistic appraisal of chinese capabilities enable capable counter-strategies to be developed. It spots chinese weaknesses and will take advantage of such weaknesses to achieve specific objectives.
Good mission planners always take a conservative view.
Taking the very broad approach that once US intervene China get's destroyed tends to be not very useful. The difference is that China has a very good picture of what the US can do. The vice versa is less so.