- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 360
The new "arms race" in East Asia for 5th Generation fighters spurred by the F-35 and the F-22; China's J31 and J20 are just the start.
Diplomat
Diplomat
Who Will Win Asia's Fifth-Generation Fighter Race?
China, Japan, South Korea and India are all developing advanced aircraft. How and why is this happening?
20150704_200326
By Benjamin David Baker
December 01, 2015
Tensions are rising high throughout the Asia-Pacific. From the Indo-Pakistani border, through Australia’s controversial border policies to China’s disputes with its neighbors in the South and East China Seas, Asian states have been increasing investments in their military capabilities. In all these cases, having forceful and credible aerial assets is a crucial part of deterrence. This is reflected in regional defense spending.
Meanwhile, the world is facing a generational shift in military aircraft. Since the final decade of the Cold War, the skies have been dominated by so-called “fourth-generation” combat aircraft: supersonic jets with increasingly sophisticated electronic capabilities, equipped with weaponry able to engage the enemy over several kilometers distance. These still make up the backbone of basically every modern air force around the world.
However, several states with large budgets and a high degree of military research and development spending are attempting to develop so-called “fifth-generation” aircraft. These jets incorporate stealth technology, which makes them difficult to detect on radar, powerful and secure communications, and advanced sensors that help pilots and ground control teams to keep “full spectrum dominance” of the battlespace.
(...SNIPPED)