Not really, RAND's 2013 report...
In RAND's 2016 report on a possible China vs US war, they basically admit the US will lose the war with current military hardware setting,...
You guys are taking these analyses the wrong way. Seriously wrong. And the reason is because none of you ever served and do not understand the purpose of these analyses. I do not say that to insult but as a statement of fact.
Here goes...
While Desert Shield was building and before I got orders to deploy, practically everyone in the squadron was reading up on various analyses on the potential shooting fight between the US and Iraq. RAND was included. Not one analysis was 'rosy' for the US and allies. China's PLA produced their own and predicted for the US, there would be Vietnam War era casualties even though the US would win -- and win decisively.
No one would be safe from Iraq's military. Iraqi air defense was assessed to be better than what the US encountered over North Viet Nam. Better in every aspects, from lethality to quality of manpower to quantity deployed. Everyone in the squadron was worried, including the enlisted because of today's modern warfare there is no 'rear echelon' anymore. Support would be targeted with possible biological/chemical weapons, the BC of NBC. Pilots returning from a sortie may not find anyone alive to safely land and marshal them home. RAND and the PLA agreed with each other.
Today, people mocked US for defeating a 'third rated' military, but had they been alive back then, they would have been among those embarrassed by their countries' analyses. In Desert Storm, the US and allies were in more danger of fratricide than from Iraqi resistance.
Which leads up to why Desert Storm embarrassed so many...
There are differences between an 'exercise', a 'war game', and a real 'war'. I will use a boxer for analogy.
A boxer do 'exercise' by lifting weight and timed sessions with the punching bag and the speed bag.
A 'war game' is when the boxer spars with a partner whose responses are usually unpredictable.
A real 'war' is when the boxer enters a real match where the outcome is recorded.
Think tank analyses like those from RAND are taken very very seriously. You guys simply do not know how seriously. Usually, they give the most optimistic estimates to the enemy and the worst case scenario to the US, and allies if necessary.
In an 'exercise', the unit's primary mission is stressed like the boxer lifting weights. For example, if the unit is a transportation company, it will have its equipment and troops under increased tempo, like a dash after a sustained jog. Instead of transporting 100 tons in one day, it will be doubled or even tripled in the same time frame.
In a 'war game', this transportation unit will be pitted against an 'enemy' and referees will commit virtual 'kills' against the unit, such as how many trucks and drivers are virtually disabled, but the unit is still committed to X tonnage per day.
What these think tank analyses does is to virtually pit the US military, under
CURRENT war doctrines, hardware, and manpower, against an enemy that is estimated to be at his best, whatever level of development he might be. This is not to get more funding from Congress to the 'military-industrial-complex'. This is common sense when lives are at stake.
From these think tank analyses, we quietly modify our doctrines, hardware, and manpower as needed. Then the exercise to war game to more analyses starts all over.
After Desert Storm, I can guarantee you guys that
NO ONE in the PLA leadership reads what RAND produces and say: "Aha...!!! If RAND says we win, we will beat the Americans." But that is what you guys are saying here. You are putting what RAND says as absolute. Fate, not destiny. And that failure to understand the purpose of why we pay RAND to do these analyses -- is why the rest of the world, including the PLA leadership, was embarrassed by Desert Storm. We have been self critical and up until now, your PLA was not.