ZeEa5KPul
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Yes and no. I think it's best to consider the J-20 in a force-on-force engagement with the US - there, because China still lacks sufficient numbers of J-20s and the US has a large number of high-value targets like AWACS and refuelers, the primary mission of the J-20 would be to destroy these high-value targets. While by design it does and can go up against enemy stealth fighters, a war of attrition of fifth gens would favour the US because of the slight kinematic edge of the F-22 and the larger numbers of F-22s/F-35s.J-20 is a dedicated air superiority fighter ... its foremost goals are not to attack AWACS/refueling aircraft nor strike targets on the ground but to shoot down IAF fighter aircraft.
Yes, but that missile would still need to be datalinked at that range - no fighter radar can lock at 400 kilometers. It needs either ground radars or a J-20 sneaking past enemy defences to guide it.I think the 400 km PL-21, carried by the J-16, would be a better AWAC killer than the dedicated A2A PL-15 missile. It is hard to go for AWACS/refueling tankers when you haven't even taken care of the fighters.