`

Tom writes

>> Meet the Air Force’s secretive long-range drone that flies for days
>> BY AUDREY DECKER  STAFF WRITER  JULY 2, 2024
>> https://www.defenseone.com/technology/2024/07/meet-air-forces-secretive-long-range-drone-flies-days/397816/
>
> This is a touring motor glider, with a camera installed. These are light
> aircraft with very long wings. Radios and computer are installed in
> place of the pilot. There are many such available. Hardly revolutionary
> technology.. The problem is to find a design suitable for mass production.

Yes Tom

And .. soon it sounds like every type of drone weapon mayseem necessary?


https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3269110/pla-mulls-drone-only-island-blockade-while-us-plans-drone-only-intervention-taiwan


[Photo Caption: “China has revealed it has the ability to form a blockade of an 
island using just drones, after the US revealed its own drone-only strategy for 
defending Taiwan.] Photo: China Defence Forum

PLA mulls drone-only island blockade while the US plans drone-only intervention 
in Taiwan

After the US unveiled its ‘Hellscape’ drone plan for Taiwan, the PLA has 
detailed a simulation of an island blockade using just drones

By Stephen Chen in Beijing Published: 6:00am, 5 Jul 2024
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3269110/pla-mulls-drone-only-island-blockade-while-us-plans-drone-only-intervention-taiwan


China’s military has the ability to impose and maintain a blockade on an island 
solely with drones, according to a study released by the People’s Liberation 
Army (PLA) last month.

Meanwhile, drones are also the key to America’s latest plan for a military 
intervention over the island of Taiwan – a drone-only strategy dubbed 
“Hellscape”.

“Area blockade and control stands as a typical application scenario for drone 
swarms in military operations,” the project team led by Chen Huijie, an 
engineer with the 92116 unit of the PLA, wrote in a peer-reviewed paper in the 
Chinese academic journal Command Control & Simulation published on June 5.

Outcomes of the “mission-level simulation verification conducted for aerial 
unmanned clusters in conjunction with an actual combat mission” have rarely 
been disclosed before due to military sensitivity, Chen’s team said.

The objective of the combat mission outlined in the paper was to form a 
blockade and control an unnamed island with a narrow shape similar to Taiwan’s 
terrain.

In the scenario, the island was fortified with a large number of air defence 
missile launchers, while hostile warships and submarines prowled the 
surrounding waters.

“Given the presence of widely dispersed, highly concealed and time-sensitive 
mobile threats on the island and its adjacent waters, employing traditional 
manned forces for reconnaissance and assaults poses a challenge of low 
cost-effectiveness,” Chen’s team wrote.

“On the contrary, unmanned equipment offers advantages including expendability, 
low cost and minimal casualties. Integrating unmanned clusters into a 
systematic war is anticipated to speed up the reconnaissance, identification, 
decision-making and attack cycles, consequently boosting overall combat 
efficacy.”

In the simulation, the PLA employed four types of drones.

Large and medium-sized drones, with good endurance as well as 
reconnaissance-and-attack capabilities, were launched from mainland Chinese 
military bases. Their duty was to “operate in all weathers, achieving prompt 
detection, identification and strikes against mobile threats”.

Then PLA naval vessels deployed small composite-wing reconnaissance drones to 
conduct close observations of concealed targets, and anti-radiation patrol 
drones to eliminate enemy radars.

[Photo Caption: The PLA simulation planned how to create a blockade on a 
heavily armed island using just drones.] Photo: Unit 92116 of PLA

After numerous simulated battles, Chen’s team discovered that deploying more or 
higher-performance drones did not necessarily yield better results.

Within a combat grid area, once the scale and diversity of drone formations 
reached a certain threshold, they could effectively control the island and its 
surrounding waters, suppressing the island’s armed forces and thwarting 
external aid.

“Further increasing the number of patrolling drones will enhance combat 
capability, but the change is not significant,” the researchers wrote.

Chen leads the testing and evaluation of unmanned systems and their operational 
use at a military base in the coastal city of Huludao, Liaoning province.

This research was assisted by the National University of Defence Technology and 
Tsinghua University.

“The analysis and evaluation of simulation results can unveil the deficiencies 
of combat scenarios and even combat methods, thereby further refining combat 
issues and the design of combat scenarios,” the researchers said.

They also intend to verify the results of the simulation in the real world.

“A warfare strategy divorced from actual troop experimentation can ultimately 
only be empty talk … a castle in the air,” Chen wrote.

But while China has been testing its drone-only combat plans, the US military 
last month revealed its own blueprint to use swarms of drones in the Taiwan 
Strait, in a strategy dubbed “Hellscape”.

These drones are intended to counter any attempt by the PLA to land on Taiwan, 
thereby sparing US casualties.

[Photo Caption: Mainland China launches PLA blockade around Taiwan, 3 days 
after William Lai speech]

“I want to turn the Taiwan Strait into an unmanned hellscape,” Admiral Samuel 
Paparo, head of US Indo-Pacific Command, told The Washington Post in an 
interview published on June 10.

Though the US military’s drone warfare methods and capabilities remain 
classified, Paparo said that under the Hellscape plan, the drones – both in the 
air and in the water – would “make their lives utterly miserable for a month, 
which buys me the time for the rest of everything”.

“I can’t tell you what’s in it. But it’s real and it’s deliverable,” Paparo 
said of the plan.

Chinese defence ministry spokesman Senior Colonel Wu Qian denounced the US 
strategy as “crazy and inhumane”.

“Those who clamour for turning others’ homeland into hell should get ready for 
burning in hell themselves,” he said in Beijing last week.

China is a global leader in drone manufacturing technology and capacity.

[Eg: 
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/military/article/3266295/china-drones-can-counter-us-hellscape-taiwan-strait-analysts]

Bloomberg reports that Chinese drones account for 90 per cent of the consumer 
market and 70 per cent of the industrial market in the United States.

According to a Wall Street Journal report in April, Chinese drones have shown 
superior performance compared to American drones during battle in Ukraine.

But the US military says that thousands of drones in the Hellscape plan would 
be sufficient to deter the PLA.

“My job is to ensure that between now and 2027 and beyond, the US military and 
its allies are capable of prevailing,” Paparo said.




Stephen Chen is the SCMP's science news editor. He investigates major research 
projects in China, a new power house of scientific and technological 
innovation, and their impact to humanity. Stephen has produced a large number 
of exclusive stories on China research, some highly controversial or shrouded 
in secrecy. He has been with the SCMP since 2006.


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