You said the SU-30 has a "basic range" of 5,000 km - where did you read this? That sounds very much like ferry range to me, are you sure the figures you saw weren't for that?
I've yet to hear of a tactical fighter with a range anywhere near that...
Not quite true. If countries are active trading partners with each other, engage in economic, diplomatic, military and social exchanges, there is a fair amount of interaction between the various countries. This can provide insight into the relationships between various nations, and the attitudes differing nations have towards one another. Given the interconnected nation of global trade, plus the sheer scope of resources needed to launch a successful strike (nevermind invasion) upon Australia, there is almost certainly going to be warning signs ahead preceding the action.And you can say that how? There is no way you know what intent they have especially in the long run. I agree they probably have no intent do do anything now but that could change and its not like they will tell you.
As AD has gone through, there are significant resources that would be required for any strike force to reach Australia, again ignoring an invasion force. Given that such a force would need to pass through/by various allied nations, the force would constitute a threat to the allied nations and would be subject to attacks. Given the example AD gave of El Dorado Canyon, how well would and IAF or PLAAF aerial tanker flight fare if engaged by RSAF fighters? IMO not well at all, and without those tankers, any airstrike would fail. This means that any such airstrike would need either sufficient fighter escorts to ensure that enough strike and tanker aircraft made it through for the attack to succeed. This in turn further increases the need for more tanker aircraft, both to provide a margin for any air combat losses, as well as to provide tanking for the fighter escort. I could be mistaken, but the only air force which currently operates tankers in such numbers happens to be the USAF.Who else but the US in that area could really do much to help, the others would be overrun quicker then us? And that is assuming the US will help. Its not like they havent left allies with no help before. Granted we are one of there longest and closest allies but i wouldnt put money on the fact of them jumping into a war with China or India that could cost thousands of US lives and billions of dollars.
You still have not seemed to grasp the scope of what you are suggesting, the resources required to achieve it, or the time required to build up those resources and acquire proficiency with them. Short of an industrialized nation moving to a wartime economic footing (think the Arsenal of Democracy in the US during WWII), such forces could not be built up within 10 years. And, if a nation did for some reason start emphasizing such construction and conducting a buildup like this, other nations would notice and either comment on it or take action.While China doesnt have much (though according to numerous sources they are trying, though it maybe all talk) India has a bunch of blue water supply ships. As i said im no expert though but seems enough to me. And as i said originally, im not worried now, i ment in 10 years or when they will have more capability.Even i know we would have no troubles if they somehow got there current carrier with ancient Harriers here. They would be wiped out very quickly.
Again i ment in 10 years or more not now. so even if its years after schedule in 2020 they will still have it and we dont.
Yes, you are wrong. The Su-30 does not have a basic range of 5k km, it has a radius of action of ~810 n miles/1.5k km. A listed range of 5k km for a fighter aircraft might be possible if it is a ferry flight. That basically means that the fighter is conducting a 1-way flight from Point A to Point B, without weapons and fitted with the maximum number of droptanks and fuel loadout, while flying at the most economical altitude and speed. The inclusion of any ordnance would have a negative impact on this range due to the increase drag, increased weight, and possibly due to a decrease in the number of droptanks carried. A radius of action is more informative, as that lists the general distance that a fighter can travel on a mission and return to base.Yes thats why i said 3 carriers not just 1. And from what ive read (correct me if im wrong) the SU30's basic range is 5000km. The Andaman Islands (Indian territory with AF bases) are only abit over 5000km away by the time they go around Indonesia, so if they tanked once on way here, fired of some anti ship missiles or whatever and headed straight back and tanked again on way back they could make it. Wouldnt be easy for sustained operation but could work in the initial attack to knock out a few more important things.
Again im no expert but that doesnt make much sense, if it can fly 6000km on a tank how does it need to refuel 6 times to do 14000km? The weapons weight and drag must make alot bigger difference then what im thinking then especially when most weapons would be gone on return trip.
If one looks at how the US operates CBGs, that would require a force structure of 3 CVs, 18 escort ships of which 9 would be equipped for area air defence, 6 attack subs, and three replenishment ships. If one looks at the Indian Navy currently, except for carriers they have sufficient vessels to achieve this sort of structure. However, to do so essentially would gut their navy. Ignoring whether or not current designs would be particularly suited to such a venture, it would require ~37% of the sub force, the entire destroyer and frigate force, as well as 30% of the replenishment vessels. This would leave Indian maritime interests defended only by the corvettes and patrol vessels. This also ignores whether or not 3 battlegroups of vessels could be constituted at one time. With some exceptions, the general rule is that for every three units/platforms/systems, only one always available for deployment or operations, and at times that can be surged to two simultaneous deployments. In effect, if the Indian Navy had a total of 3 CBGs, a maximum of two could be deployed at the same time. And there would still be the issue of leaving Indian home waters and maritime interests vulnerable to other parties or nations.As i keep having to repeat, i ment in the future when they had 3 full carriers and a proper battlegroup protecting them. Even if that is 20 years away, it still seems silly to me to just do nothing about it and hope for the best. Especially with how slow and hopeless our military and the civilian companies helping it are at doing things when they say they will. Everything we build seems to of had years of failures before we get it right.
You seem to forget the past. I agree being connected or allied with the country helps alot but it gives no guarantee's. France was one of Germany's biggest trading partners that didnt stop Germany invading.Not quite true. If countries are active trading partners with each other, engage in economic, diplomatic, military and social exchanges, there is a fair amount of interaction between the various countries. This can provide insight into the relationships between various nations, and the attitudes differing nations have towards one another. Given the interconnected nation of global trade, plus the sheer scope of resources needed to launch a successful strike (nevermind invasion) upon Australia, there is almost certainly going to be warning signs ahead preceding the action.
Again your just assuming Singapore would help, its just as likely they would try to stay out of it rather then fight an upcoming superpower, and India doesnt even need to go near Singapore. Its just a easy cruise straight here through open ocean.As AD has gone through, there are significant resources that would be required for any strike force to reach Australia, again ignoring an invasion force. Given that such a force would need to pass through/by various allied nations, the force would constitute a threat to the allied nations and would be subject to attacks. Given the example AD gave of El Dorado Canyon, how well would and IAF or PLAAF aerial tanker flight fare if engaged by RSAF fighters? IMO not well at all, and without those tankers, any airstrike would fail.
Again im not an expert so sorry to sound rude but i think you seem to think taking us over would be alot harder then it is. You cant seriously compare the US operations all over Europe and the Pacific fighting both the Germans and Japanese with fighting us in Australia. It is nothing the same and we would be nothing in comparison.You still have not seemed to grasp the scope of what you are suggesting, the resources required to achieve it, or the time required to build up those resources and acquire proficiency with them.
Where is that information from? As i said i looked at a good 10-15 sites that all say around 5000km for the MK1 and the basic Su-30 about 3000km combat range. I also read numerous quotes about that was one of the best things about the Su-30, its large range.Yes, you are wrong. The Su-30 does not have a basic range of 5k km, it has a radius of action of ~810 n miles/1.5k km. A listed range of 5k km for a fighter aircraft might be possible if it is a ferry flight.
Er, you mean besides a lack of long range exercising, lack of sustained investment in force structures intended to project power half way around the world, lack of REASON why they would want to do this and good economic, cultural, diplomatic and military ties between our nations?And you can say that how? There is no way you know what intent they have especially in the long run. I agree they probably have no intent do do anything now but that could change and its not like they will tell you.
Over run by what? Even Carlo Kopp admits, if you look hard enough, that China only has the capability to deploy a Regiment (3x fighter squadrons) into the South East asian region. Such a deployment would be worthy of notice and response, but it is hardly the end of us as a sovereign nation...Who else but the US in that area could really do much to help, the others would be overrun quicker then us? And that is assuming the US will help. Its not like they havent left allies with no help before. Granted we are one of there longest and closest allies but i wouldnt put money on the fact of them jumping into a war with China or India that could cost thousands of US lives and billions of dollars.
Enough for what? A suicidal attack on Australia's mainland? In 10 years, Australia will have more capability.While China doesnt have much (though according to numerous sources they are trying, though it maybe all talk) India has a bunch of blue water supply ships. As i said im no expert though but seems enough to me. And as i said originally, im not worried now, i ment in 10 years or when they will have more capability.
The MiG-29K's whilst individually better aircraft, won't make an Indian taskforce vastly more survivable overall, particularly if it has to fight something like the ADF at extended distances from it's own support base.Even i know we would have no troubles if they somehow got there current carrier with ancient Harriers here. They would be wiped out very quickly.
No, but we do have long ranged strike capability inherent in land based aircraft and surface and sub-surface combatants, we have the very long range and broad area maritime and air surveillance capability, we have a superior force in networking terms, in 10 years we will have a massive advantage in very low observable strike capability and WE are the ones on home soil, not the Indians or the Chinese and thus range is not such an issue for us...Again i ment in 10 years or more not now. so even if its years after schedule in 2020 they will still have it and we dont.
According to Sukhoi, the SU-30MK has a 5200k range with one in-flight refuelling, carring an external fuel load of 2x R-27 BVR air to air missiles and 2x R-73 air to air missiles.Yes thats why i said 3 carriers not just 1. And from what ive read (correct me if im wrong) the SU30's basic range is 5000km. The Andaman Islands (Indian territory with AF bases) are only abit over 5000km away by the time they go around Indonesia, so if they tanked once on way here, fired of some anti ship missiles or whatever and headed straight back and tanked again on way back they could make it. Wouldnt be easy for sustained operation but could work in the initial attack to knock out a few more important things.
Because ferry ranges listed by manufacturers are maximum ranges an aircraft can achieve under ideal flight conditions carrying the maximum amount of fuel they can carry whilst flying at the most fuel efficient speed and altitude.Again im no expert but that doesnt make much sense, if it can fly 6000km on a tank how does it need to refuel 6 times to do 14000km? The weapons weight and drag must make alot bigger difference then what im thinking then especially when most weapons would be gone on return trip.
And as I keep having to repeat, ADF are hardly doing "nothing" about the capability enhancements within our "region". Are you un-aware that we are or intend to acquire in the very same timeframe:As i keep having to repeat, i ment in the future when they had 3 full carriers and a proper battlegroup protecting them. Even if that is 20 years away, it still seems silly to me to just do nothing about it and hope for the best.
Super Hornets are here. Wedgetails are here, KC-30A's exist and are under-going final testing in Spain right now and will be in Australia before the end of the year. JASSM is here. JSOW is here.Especially with how slow and hopeless our military and the civilian companies helping it are at doing things when they say they will. Everything we build seems to of had years of failures before we get it right.
That is the other problem. All those rubbish figures being thrown around reaches the West coast of Australia. Somewhere, where there is ABSOLUTELY nothing of military value worth attacking.A side note, invaisions arent cheap.
A 1986 estimate, based on a 3-1 ivaision ratio to the invaders vs ADF (eg, at that time Australia had 6 understreangth infantry battalions) enemy would require 18 understreangth bns to defeat us. the cost of supporting 18 bns in australia from india/indonesia/china or the then USSR was estimated at roughly the cost of the entire Falklands campaign .....PER DAY. Support includes everything, navy airforce etc etc.....
day one , invaders land in North west australia/northern territory.....then what? its a long way to move from there to anywhere....your choice of MSR,s are the Stuart high way, or the stuart highway. now what?
You keep making out like i mean in the next few weeks, where i mean in years, 10-20 even. Alot of that stuff could change in 1 year let alone 10-20.Er, you mean besides a lack of long range exercising, lack of sustained investment in force structures intended to project power half way around the world, lack of REASON why they would want to do this and good economic, cultural, diplomatic and military ties between our nations?
Yeah, besides all that is it quite obvious that could be attacked...
Yes i have heard of that agreement and maybe over the years as we have become more connected it has changed but as far as i know technically its only about the defence of Singapore and Malaysia, not Australia.I assume you've heard of the Five Power Defence Agreement? Any move by Chinese, Indian or any other forces (Indonesian perhaps) along the lines you are describing would be confronted by a coalition effort in the SEA region.
Do you think Countries in the path of a hostile invasion force are simply going to allow it by without challenge?
??Ah the big one, WW2, we where at war (along with the UK and other allies) 2 years before the US came to help, and that was only because they where attacked themselves at Pearl Harbour, or they may have stayed out much longer.As to the assistance of the United States, show me one example of the USA failing to assist Australia when we have required it and if you try to use Timor as an example, prepare for a slapping, because you have not done your homework and are in for a surprise...
The Indians would basically be able to fly straight and level most of the way here, its all over international waters, and if it was the first strike like i said we wouldnt be rushing out to meet them till they where close to Australia (well close in relative terms).Flying straight, level and at efficient subsonic cruise speeds (ala a civilian airliner) is an excellent way to ensure you maximise the range of your aircraft. It is also an excellent way of ensuring you suffer a mission failure if you happen to be a combat aircraft...
I didnt actually mean nothing but as you pointed out yourself in post #78 i think it was, we have a history of many problems with military equipmentAnd as I keep having to repeat, ADF are hardly doing "nothing" about the capability enhancements within our "region". Are you un-aware that we are or intend to acquire in the very same timeframe:
Agreed. But the case is the same for India. Australia has excellent relations with India and it is extremely unlikely that either would attack Australia.I really don't see China attacking Australia, or another nation unless it was attacked first. From most of the history China hasn't invaded nations that didn't consider their own sovereignty. Tawain is an island of China, which the CCP see it as part of the greater China. Tibet was lost from the invasion of China, but took it back. And since China is reliant on Australia natural resources, I can see China actually assisting Australia if India tries to invade and fledge war on Australia.
But unless they maintain bases closer to Australia, their tactical fighter escorts will not be able to escort the bombers even on standoff missile attack type missions due to the very same range constraints that Indian fighters face.Considering that China if they for some crazy unlikely reason of invading China they cannot get their in large numbers. And Aussie Digger China ain't gonna send in bombers alone for a turkey shoot for the RAAF. But those bombers ain't the ones that need to be ontop of their targets for effectiveness, since most of them are and as of now being converted to be stand off missle platform. They'll be escorted by the Russian built or License produced Flankers and the pilots for those fighters aren't the ill trained pilots of the 80-90s anymore like most people still think. But still as of now China cannot "invade" or fledge war to another nation outside of Asia, due to its restraints in its inventory.
I don't think it would get to that. The US would no doubt threaten retaliation first if someone began threatening to launch such weapons.Food for thought would US really launch a nuclear war with China, just cause China launched ICBM to Australia? Would they risk having ICBM launched on themselves? As much as I see the US helping us in conventional warefare, personally I would think they would sit still if it was ICBM.
Article IV
Each Party recognizes that an armed attack in the Pacific Area on any of the Parties would be dangerous to its own peace and safety and declares that it would act to meet the common danger in accordance with its constitutional processes.
You are forgetting the Super Hornets. We have 5 now and 7 coming in July and IOC will be declared in December 2010 for the Supers, however platform numbers don't tell the full story.For China force anaylsis, Ground Force is formidable, Airforce is semi to full formidable, Navy only for defence with no power project capability of significance. Indeed Australia forces are modern, but thats due to its large budget and small force distrubtion. You can have say 50 F-15 for nation A, and 1 F-22 for nation B. People say its small force but modern, well its easier to get a modern force if its small you have more money to distrubute to each, compared to larger force. Indded nation B is more modern then A but its quantity is too small to ratio to make and significance. Their must be balance between quality and quantity. Though repeating again China from all points accounted for won't attack Australia if it ain't seriously military prevoked to its own nation.
Not all about numbers but lets see for the sake of it, im only counting modern platforms:
RAAF: 71 Fighter (F-18)
PLAAF: 460-488 Fighter (J-10, Flankers)
IAF: 234 Fighter (Mig-29, Su-30, Mirage 2000)
In fighter jets alone PLAAF and IAF overwhelm the RAAF, but once again thats just numbers.
I couldn't comment about India cause I havent studied Indian economy, culture and history. But I have for China so thats why I focused on one. What one thing that annoys me on our nation is comparatively high budget for much smaller force. Though the population isn't that large either. I knew that Supers have delivered just didn't know how many. I sure am gonna miss viewing the F-111 dump and burn thoughAgreed. But the case is the same for India. Australia has excellent relations with India and it is extremely unlikely that either would attack Australia.
For "land grabbing" purposes is all but unthinkable.
But unless they maintain bases closer to Australia, their tactical fighter escorts will not be able to escort the bombers even on standoff missile attack type missions due to the very same range constraints that Indian fighters face.
JORN covering 3500k's North of Australia will make such attacks a non-viable option...
I don't think it would get to that. The US would no doubt threaten retaliation first if someone began threatening to launch such weapons.
If some madmen just fired them without warning, then the US most definitely would launch in response and the reason has nothing to do with Australia. With ICBM's, because of their flight profiles, it is very difficult to tell where they are actually being launched at. If USA observed China begin to launch un-announced, ICBM warshots, then it would probably have no choice but to launch in retaliation itself in the expectation that it had been fired upon first.
That is the reason why despite talk and the un-doubted effectiveness of a conventionally armed ICBM, at the great speeds they travel at and the responsiveness that comes from that, that it will be very difficult for USA to convince others, that they are only launching conventionally armed ICBM's. There's no known way for others to "confirm" that what the USA is saying is true and with no way to detect for the crucial part of the flight (ie: whilst you still have a chance to fight back) where the missile is headed, most Countries aren't willing to "take the word" of others when it comes to ICBM's...
Add to which the USA is required by Treaty to come to our aid, if we are attacked...
Article IV - ANZUS Treaty
You are forgetting the Super Hornets. We have 5 now and 7 coming in July and IOC will be declared in December 2010 for the Supers, however platform numbers don't tell the full story.
IAF and PLAAF obviously are much bigger air arms than the RAAF. However they do not possess the ability to deploy these numbers against Australia and won't for some time.
Australia's armed forces are designed against a credible force that could be employed against us, in a defence of Australia scenario, plus some capability to deploy force packages overseas, not some imaginary future threat that is vastly more capable of doing us harm than exists today or is even projected to exist in 10 or 20 years hence. Now things can change, obviously, but they can't change so that our national sovereignty would be severely threatened without us knowing about it, and without lead up time to enable us to expand our capability to match this significantly increased threat.
Our current military forces are provided for utilising only 2% of our GDP. Many Countries, including the USA, India and China spend far more. If we absolutely needed to, so could we and in fact several years ago, John Howard during an interview, admitted this very thing.
The strategic imperative to do so, simply isn't there however and people tossing up red-herrings and what if's doesn't change this fact...
Can't help there.I couldn't comment about India cause I havent studied Indian economy, culture and history.
We pay more for better equipment and our servicemen and women are paid much higher wages then their Indian and Chinese counterparts.But I have for China so thats why I focused on one. What one thing that annoys me on our nation is comparatively high budget for much smaller force.
Olympic closing ceremony and 2000 new years in sydney were classics.Though the population isn't that large either. I knew that Supers have delivered just didn't know how many. I sure am gonna miss viewing the F-111 dump and burn though
Send them back where they came from. They are queue jumpers if nothing else. Plus to get here they go through at least half a dozen countries where they could and *should* apply for asylum.I just had to reply to the thread question. Though the real problem is not invasion, financial its the people in Xmas island and immigrants flooding in from boats after Ruds legislation easing the restrictions.
firstly, sorry for the cost of the falklands thing, the figures are very "rubbery" to say the least, but lets face it, no one is going to invade Australia ever, its not worth it, no gain. What we could face is raids on infrastucture. that would be damageing (very) cheap for the baddies and send us into a huge defence spend.
Raids could potentially be conducted as part of an economic warfare campaign. As an example, attacks could be launched at offshore oil platforms, to reduce domestic production capacity. In a similar vein, attacks could also be launched at shore-based petroleum storage facilities to reduce domestic petroleum stocks. Alternatively, attacks could be made upon LNG facilities (not sure if there are any in Oz) with the intention of inflicting massive damage, as a large LNG facility could be made to explode to achieve an effect similar to a small nuclear device detonating.I dont get that why do you think we would face military raids but not invasion (other then the obvious that its alot harder). I dont see the point in any country starting a limited war where they just attack infastructure without any clear military objective, what would be the point of that?
They are going to spend a fortune and get themselves kicked out of any western agreements they are in for absolutely no reason other then the pleasure of attacking us?
Thats seems stupider then invading to me, atleast there is a point to that.