Cerberus21
ACCESS: Restricted
- Joined
- 6 November 2025
- Messages
- 39
- Reaction score
- 78
Whoa, that rattled the hive.
What????
what
Are you not taking into account that the Chinese military can also be quoted *all show no go* when the time for invasion finally comes? By whatever metric you are using for that quote.It has already become evident that it would be a walk in the park for the PLA as soon as it became evident this year that the US military at large is all show and no go. Losing most of their bases in the middle east, several high value or outright irreplaceable assets and being unable to conduct carrier ops without grave mishaps and issues against a far less sophisticated and far less numerously equipped fighting force.
Even in the past but especially In the current age you can bypass air-supremacy or supress it not any-where close to completely BUT to a very significant extent using ground launched drones & missiles.Air supremacy wins wars. Thats the way it will always be, until a larger transition to space dominance occurs
was
What?
Of course that's a possibility. Although it's much less likely because unlike the US the Chinese have invested their resources into what matters, which isn't obsolete bombers and maintaining forever platforms of questionable viability. They invested into drones, missiles, IADS that includes short, medium, long range and ballistic missile defense (as compared to the US basically having near zero SHORAD, because 'muh Air superiority' will 110% prevent anyone from shooting at you...)Are you not taking into account that the Chinese military can also be quoted *all show no go* when the time for invasion finally comes? By whatever metric you are using for that quote.
Plus U.S. would be on the defensive in Taiwan conflict, unlike in Iran war where U.S. military is on the offensive & has inflicted multitude more damage to Iran than vice-versa, what is holding up U.S. victory is underestimation of how much pain Iran can handle and still doesn't surrender or collapse, along with its ability to block Strait of Hormuz & how vulnerable gulf states are.
That is a spectacularly bad take.It has already become evident that it would be a walk in the park for the PLA as soon as it became evident this year that the US military at large is all show and no go. Losing most of their bases in the middle east, several high value or outright irreplaceable assets and being unable to conduct carrier ops without grave mishaps and issues against a far less sophisticated and far less numerously equipped fighting force.
Yet. I'm sure someone is planning on building a couple.Even if you believe that this war is going well for the Iranians, all it says about the China fight is that the Taiwanese could be more resilient than expected. The Chinese have to execute a D-Day sized amphibious operation against any adversary with a stronger A2/AD capability than anything the Germans had in Normandy. That would be extremely difficult for a military with no large-scale combat experience in the last 50 years even if they weren't going to have the world's largest air force and Navy lined up against them. If there's anywhere that air superiority matters, it's over the ocean, and there's no such thing as an amphibious warfare submarine.
Bases lost? None. Name the base that the US has abandoned due to damage.
Bases damaged? a number.
High value or irreplaceable assets lost? Two tankers, two AWACS, and one TPY2 (thus far). The only one of those that is a pain in the butt to replace is the TPY2, and I think the US has demonstrated Aegis feeding data to THAAD before. So we could stuff a Burke into the Black Sea or eastern Med by Syria for coverage in a pinch.
"Carrier ops without mishaps"? My dude, fires happen. If they happen in the wrong spaces, they get bad. Because there's no space to run, and bunkrooms are parked in places that are right next to places that like to catch on fire if you let them. I'm just amazed that they haven't also had a crash while landing. Those can get really bad, if the crashing plane hits the deck park.
That was over a week ago, by now it's even worse.Many of the 13 military bases in the region used by American troops are all but uninhabitable, with the ones in Kuwait, which is next door to Iran, suffering perhaps the most damage. Six U.S. service members were killed in a strike on Port Shuaiba that destroyed an Army tactical operations center. Iranian drones and missiles also targeted Ali Al Salem Air Base, damaging aircraft structures and injuring personnel, and Camp Buehring, damaging maintenance and fuel facilities.
Another AN/TPY-2
IRGC has claimed to have shot down another F-15, showing what appears to be section of the tail.
The "another" I mentioned is in contrast to this one.Isn’t this the same radar that got hit March 1st? We finally got visual confirmation.
I wonder if the location can be ascertained by geolocation experts based on that hill in the backround. As always, iranian sources claim they shot it down over Iran, while western posters say all kinds of other things, it's one of those lost in Kuwait last month, it's a crash site in the US etc.More pictures.
Sure hope so, these reports are just 30 minutes old, so we might have to wait a bit.I wonder if the location can be ascertained by geolocation experts based on that hill in the backround.
Yes.Isn’t this the same radar that got hit March 1st? We finally got visual confirmation.
Ahh yes, the mighty H-6 of non-existence.because unlike the US the Chinese have invested their resources into what matters, which isn't obsolete bombers and maintaining forever platforms of questionable viability
Iran struck a water desalination and power plant in Kuwait hours after hitting an oil refinery.
Tehran launched strikes on the Gulf state’s energy infrastructure after the US attacked Iranian civilian infrastructure on Friday.
Donald Trump boasted about destroying bridges outside Tehran and threatened to bomb power plants next.
Kuwait relies on desalination, which removes salt from seawater, for 90 per cent of its drinking water. Iran also targeted a desalination plant in the Gulf state on Monday.
The Kuwait army said its air defences were attempting to intercept “hostile missile and drone attacks” on Friday.
Also on Friday, Iran launched strikes on Israel and the United Arab Emirates.
The Gulf conflict has already sent oil prices well above $100 a barrel, with Brent crude reaching $141 on Thursday.