China's Stealth Fighter: Designed in America?

L

Lighthorse

Guest
China's Stealth Fighter: Designed in America?
Ah irony. While we buy piles of junk from China by way of Wal-Mart, the Chinese are reverse-engineering US stealth technology by way of the Balkans.

Balkan military officials and other experts have told The Associated Press that in all probability the Chinese gleaned some of their technological know-how from an American F-117 Nighthawk that was shot down over Serbia in 1999.
Nighthawks were the world's first stealth fighters, planes that were very hard for radar to detect. But on March 27, 1999, during NATO's aerial bombing of Serbia in the Kosovo war, a Serbian anti-aircraft missile shot one of the Nighthawks down. The pilot ejected and was rescued.
It was the first time one of the much-touted "invisible" fighters had ever been hit. The Pentagon believed a combination of clever tactics and sheer luck had allowed a Soviet-built SA-3 missile to bring down the jet.
The wreckage was strewn over a wide area of flat farmlands, and civilians collected the parts — some the size of small cars — as souvenirs.
"At the time, our intelligence reports told of Chinese agents crisscrossing the region where the F-117 disintegrated, buying up parts of the plane from local farmers," says Adm. Davor Domazet-Loso, Croatia's military chief of staff during the Kosovo war.
"We believe the Chinese used those materials to gain an insight into secret stealth technologies ... and to reverse-engineer them," Domazet-Loso said in a telephone interview.
A senior Serbian military official confirmed that pieces of the wreckage were removed by souvenir collectors, and that some ended up "in the hands of foreign military attaches."
Efforts to get comment from China's defense ministry and the Pentagon were unsuccessful.
 
Thing is China is 20 years from mass producing these bad boys in the numbers that are required to strike fear into the USA and other superpowers. In 20 years time these Chinese fighters will be fighting against unmanned fighter jets controlled by some guys sitting in a comms centre supping coffee and eating donuts between dogfights.
 
That is true but China's economy still makes them a formidable threat. It's unlikely that the US will be able spend them into oblivion like we did with the USSR.
 
That is true but China's economy still makes them a formidable threat. It's unlikely that the US will be able spend them into oblivion like we did with the USSR.

Yes, because not only have our esteemed business leaders moved most of our manufacturing base to China, we now have to buy everything from them that we used to make here (or in Japan...). What did the commies say years ago, 'We'll kill you using your own system" or something along those lines...
 
Back
Top Bottom