First and foremost.... I never said current IADS, whether S400 or China's, evicerate our current 5th Gen fighters capabilities. So repetitive assertions that I made such claims and that they are hogwash is specious. BTW this thread started as a query, intended to take the range of techniques to counter modern IADS.
And my comment you respond to is meant to illustrate that MANY military planners and strategic policy analysts tend to cling to their own gospel. My point is the overwhelming dismissivness sometimes seen here is propelled by a "the earth is flat" mentality.
I've already acknowleged my awareness of the Australian source flaws.
So can we all move on with this? Besides, I have seen enough policy failures within the USAF and NSC and elsewhere to know a lot of them think ignorance is bliss.
Asking a question about IADS and its effect on legacy fighters and military planning isn't the same as claiming the sky is falling. I never said S400 and its ilk have eliminated the West's decades-long air power advantage. I asked only how does it manipulate the new battleground.
No, but the opening post in this thread started with this...
Russia has devleoped, fielded, and has offered overseas sales of their S400 IADS which, on paper, looks pretty darn impressive. So much so that it looks to viscerate whatever edge western airpower can effectively muster these days. At least to the point that air losses would be politically unacceptable to most industrialized nations.
The quote managed to overlook a number of capabilities which top tier air forces have, which can be gotten into later.
From the opening post though, this discussion has not really been about IADS, but a ground-based IADS. This is significant, because a IADS relying upon GBAD has significant limitations vs. IADS making use of (or even largely reliant upon) aerial-based IADS.
There was an IADS thread which I had started about a year ago, but could not really get a chance to do more work on. Once I have time, I will get back to it, but there are elements here which are worth discussing.
In basic terms, an IADS will have four key elements. These are sensors, shooters, command, and comms. Eliminate any one of the four, and the IADS falls apart.
Now for some realities. Broad/wide area air search radar surveillance is best conducted from up high, to extend the radar horizon and also get above potential ground clutter. Unless the area the radar installation is located at is atop a lone mountain peak, with several hundred miles to the next mountainous area... there is going to null/deadspaces within the radar coverage. And that is assuming a powerful, fixed location radar emitter.
To perhaps better grasp the limitations that a ground-based radar array has (a non-bi or multi-static radar array that is...), the radar horizon at sea level is roughly 28 - 38 km. So, when the ground-based radar is operating at a flat site at sea level, attempting to detect a target also at sea level, assuming no obstructions like trees, buildings or raised terrain features like hills, mountains, ridgelines, etc, if the target is more than 38 km away, the ground radar station would not be able to get a return because the signal would be blocked by the curvature of the earth.
The actual reality is a bit more complicated in most cases, because there are terrain features and obstructions, but if one understands the range limitations imposed on ground-based radars, one can understand why so many US/NATO cruise missiles and AShM have low altitude terrain following/sea skimming flight profiles. Using a US TacTom LACM as an example, assuming the flat area, no obstructions give above and that the LACM target was the radar array, the TacTom would be flying at 0.9 Mach, or ~16 km/minute which would give the radar array up to ~2 minutes between the time the TacTom would be first detected, and the TacTom would strike the radar array. Two minutes for the radar contact to be detected, identified, have that information relayed to a command centre, have the command make a decision(s)/issue orders, have those orders relayed to SAM and/or AAG assets (assuming there are any located within close enough range to do any good), have the SAM's/AAG's get a firing solution on the moving TacTom and actually fire upon the incoming missile accurately enough to disable/destroy it before impacting on the radar array.
If one understands the above scenario which I outlined above, and some realities about radar operation, then one should be able to understand that any system which relies to a large extent upon ground-based assets (sensors in particular) can be picked apart by an opposing force, if the opposing force has sufficient time.
-Cheers