In spite of that, the Iraqi Air Force survived desert storm. So did its IADs.
It just needs to destroy all of the runways and fixed+visible building (military base, airbase buildings, power stations, communication center). It has the necessary stand off weapons in terms of LACM, satellite guided glide bombs, WS-2 and ballistic missiles to be able to do this.
Regarding the current and evolving threat of Chinese precision weaponry?? I agree they are getting very capable in this area.
you can do a search on weapons like KD-88, YJ-91, LS-6, LT-2 (LS-500J), FT-1, FT-3, kab-500, kab-1500, which are basically the precision weaponary you are looking at. Main launch platforms are JH-7A and su-30mkk.
If you do an operational analysis for Taiwan vs PRC in the first 24-48 hours and include current airfield capacity, OR rates and ability to coordinate(Battle Management) fighters today the numbers of aircraft available to the PRC that could actually influence the air battle on the PRC side don't have the same quantitative advantage the coalition did in ODS.
I already mentionned the fighters/bombers that are available in these scenarios. If we just look consider all of the J-10s in the country + JH-7A + MKKs, that's already plenty of available fighters. That's discounting all of the su-27s and J-8IIs in the nearby area.
Number of modern surface combatants on bouth sides is similar
hmm, I guess 052Bs/Sovs are getting too old for you?
How many modern fighters Taiwan has? Even if we know that they have limited supply of Aim-120 missiles there is still large stock of Aim-7s. Also you should consider Mirage 2000 armed whit Mica.
they have 120 AMRAAMs and not all of their F-16s are even capable of firing it. J-10 equipped with PL-12 vs F-16As with AIM-7 will be like target practice.
there's a lot more than that if you factor in WS-2 (which can reach anywhere in Taiwan), should have more than 100 cruise missiles.
You are facing multiple waves of air launched LACMs like KD-63 and KD-88 and DH-10.
If I decide to shoot, say, 500 Tien Kung/PAC-2 and 200 I-Hawk at those, that number is reduced with a further 490.
how well did PAC-2 perform against ballistic missiles in ODS? You really think 500 PAC-2 can take down 490? I really don't think I-hawk have anti-ballistic capability.
3 PAC-2 batteries with 600 rounds, mobile.
18 I-Hawk batteries with 1000 rounds, mobile.
47 Avenger, mobile.
? MANPADS Stinger, mobile.
you either have the rounds available to defend against initial wave or they are moving and not targettable. It's either one or the other. You can't have both ways.
The air defence are the sensors and much of the C2. They also have a huge footprint, so much of the BM effort to take down the IADS would be aimed at them => lucrative targets.
yes, but they only have so many PAC-2 batteries, whose performance in ODS was pitiful to say the least. After using them up, these amazing ABM sensors will have the ability to detect missiles, but no ability to take them down.
Well, then you better have your supporting Stingers, Avengers AA guns ready to deal with it.
your stingers and avengers simply don't have the capability of shooting down mach4.5 HARM like YJ-91. The range of KD-88, YJ-91 + radar of JH-7A allows these missiles to always be able to be launched outside the range of opposing SAMs.
I hope by now people are seeing the futility of the OOTB hypothesis with regard to a PRC vs Taiwan scenario. Even alone the Taiwanese could seriously maul an invasion force. And this is Before the CSF or land based aircraft from allied nations got involved.
didn't seem to me that people answering to this thread have a good idea of the available arsenals of pla, so no, I haven't seen enough evidence by a long shot.
By day ~7 a CSF could be on station. The PRC would have suffered moderate to enormous losses and depleted significant amounts of its best munitions.
you mean, deplete ballistic missiles and WS-2 missiles and LACMs? yes, but why would PLA need that against CSF? It will still have a healthy supply of YJ-83, YJ-83K and YJ-91s. Unlike Taiwan, it will still have a healthy stash of AAMs left. Just in terms of imported BVR AAMs, PLAAF currently has over 1000 R-77s and probably 3000-4000 R-27s. Not going to be used up anytime soon.
You guys need to remember to take into account the 12 new ATBM (TK-3) batteries that Taiwan will be introducing from this year onwards - they will hugely supplement its current (and future) anti-missile capabilities.
claiming that you have ATBM capability doesn't mean you have it.
Ok here we go again... How will you hit somthing of the SAM size whit missile that has 500-600m CEP (for DF11A CEP is aprox.200m)? What good will do targeting BM smaller then airfield?
DF-5 in 1980s had CEP of 250 m at a range of 9000 km. You think the short range ballistic missiles used against Taiwan in 2007 would have a larger CEP? DF-15's CEP of 30-50m is a good reference point. DF-11 figures are for export systems, not the same as the stuff pla is getting.
The real CEP of these systems are classified.