Aviation Week & Space Technology - 3 November 2014

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anti-radar missile that is also intended
for internal carriage on the T-50.
The side missile bays differ from
those of the F-22 in that the doors can
be closed after the missile rail has been
extended, and have been seen with a
missile—or test shape—with low-as-
pect-ratio wings and folding tails. So far,
no gun has been seen on J-20s, nor has
there been a sign of provision for one.
The J-20 design, therefore, is an
air-to-air fighter with an emphasis on
forward-aspect stealth, efcient high-
speed aerodynamics and range, with a
modest internal payload and more than
adequate agility for self-defense. The
aircraft has considerable potential for


development, because of its currently
unsophisticated engines. But it is also
large and expensive, and continued
development of the J-10B shows that
China plans to maintain a high-low mix
of fighters for a long time to come.
This concept fits very well into an
anti-access/area-denial strategy given
China’s regional geography and the
fact that the nation’s military and geo-
political ambitions are focused on the
China Sea and its surrounding island
chains. The U.S. has committed its
armed forces to concentrate much of
their funding on tactical fighters with
a combat radius of 600 mi., much less
than the distance from their bases to
targets on the Chinese mainland, and
has persuaded its allies to do the same.
As a result, operations are almost
entirely dependent on two groups of
aircraft: tankers and large intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR)
aircraft with long endurance. Under
the “distributed control” concept
favored by U.S. Air Force command-
ers as a hedge against electronic
warfare, including cyberattacks, the
ISR aircraft also have a control-and-
communications function. However,

both tankers and ISR aircraft are vul-
nerable to attack, and maintaining a
defensive combat air patrol (CAP) over
them at long range is also difcult.
The J-20’s primary mission, there-
fore, may be to use stealth and speed to
break through the CAP and threaten vi-
tal tankers and ISR platforms. Its range
gives it a “long lance” advantage—if the
tankers, ISR aircraft and escorts have
to stay out of the J-20’s range, the tacti-
cal aircraft that they support will not
have the airborne radar cover or range
needed to reach their targets.
Also, an anti-radar missile would
give the J-20 some capability against
shipping, even with internal weapons.
China’s new CM-400AKG and YJ-12
high-speed antiship missiles will not
fit the J-20’s weapon bays, but could
probably be carried under the wings,
and future internal weapons will in-
crease its ofensive capacity.
In a very broad sense, the J-20 could
turn out to be an analogue to the So-
viet-era Tu-22M2/3 Backfire bomb-
er—an efcient and practical blend of
low-risk technologies that generates
options for its users and difcult prob-
lems for its adversaries. c

AviationWeek.com/awst AVIATION WEEK & SPACE TECHNOLOGY/NOVEMBER 3/10, 2014 59


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