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China’s J-20 & Su-35 Airbases: How PLAAF Has Spread Its Wings To Fight US & India Over “Disputed Regions’

The Chengdu J-20 “Mighty Dragon” is the flagship project of China’s military modernization. This fifth-generation fighter is meant to support China’s air dominance in the East and South China Seas and across the Himalayas.

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The aircraft is designed to take on the leading US fighters, such as the F-22 and F-35. Nearly 250 have already been built, and over 200 have been operationally inducted. The PLA Air Force (PLAAF) is expected to have 400 aircraft by 2027, and they target having nearly 1,000 by 2035.

China has one of the largest economies and is still growing significantly. According to the Global Data Fixed-Wing Market Forecast of 2022-32, the assessed current cost of the J-20 is around $100 million per aircraft. The overall program is anticipated to cost around $30 billion. China can afford such spending to meet its global power aspirations.

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China has understood that for projecting power and becoming a global military leader, pushing air, maritime, and space dominance is crucial. Therefore they are also investing significantly in aircraft carriers.

For several years, it has been known and publicly acknowledged that China has surpassed the U.S. Navy in the sheer number of warships. In a recent testimony on Capitol Hill, the head of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command suggested that China may soon have the world’s largest air force.

Work is now aggressively underway to operationalize the Shenyang J-31, another Indigenous fifth-generation fighter that follows the J-20. Relatively smaller, this F-35 look-alike will have a carrier variant.

China also bought nearly squadron-sized Su-35 (24 aircraft). Some contend that this was primarily to understand further developments by the Sukhoi Design Bureau.

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It could help it reverse engineer some more technologies to improve its Su-30MKK and other similar fleets. But this multi-role aircraft does give PLAAF more firepower. The Su-35S entered service with PLAAF in April 2018 and is based in Guangdong province in southeast China.

Chinese Military Airbases

Any country builds its airbases considering the long-term threat perception. Similarly, the latest aircraft and other combat assets are positioned at these airbases based on current threats.

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China is known to have nearly 150 military-useable airbases. Over 100 of these are of PLAAF, and many others are dual-use airfields across several different Military Regions and Districts in China. China is a large country, and with 400,000 active personnel and nearly 3,500 aircraft of various types, PLAAF is a large air force and, therefore, a large number of airbases.

With such a large number of ISR (Intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance) satellites, it has become very easy to assess the airbase layout and assets operating there. A fairly large amount of information is now available through OSINT (Open-source intelligence), which can be corroborated by many independent sources. This article primarily looks at the J-20 and Su-35 airbases.

The 176th Aviation Brigade, Dingxin

The 176th Aviation Brigade is at Dingxin Airbase, Gansu, in the Gobi Desert near Mongolia. It is an experimental testing and training facility in Western China and the first unit to receive J-20 low-rate initial production (LRIP) aircraft.

It is part of Western Theatre Command (WTC). Some call it China’s top-secret desert airbase. The airbase’s large aprons allow operations of over a hundred different types of aircraft.

It has long been a military and weapons testing center. The airbase supports the development of tactics and weaponry and advanced training in large-force scenarios. It also has an aggressor squadron comprising Su-30s and J-10s, as well as full-scale aerial target drones converted from older MIG variants.

It can be termed an analog to the Nellis Air Force Base in the United States or a combination of India’s TACDE (Tactics and Air Combat Development Establishment) and ASTE (Aircraft & Systems Testing Establishment).

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