We formally confirm the combat achievements of the J-10C fighter jet. Unexpectedly, foreign media suddenly published an article questioning whether the combat power of the Chinese military is really that strong. On January 11, foreign media reported that China is "threatening" Taiwan, and that Taiwan produces 90% of the world's most advanced semiconductors - the chips in your mobile phones, cars, and laptops. About one-third of global trade passes through the waters near China. A war, especially a war involving both China and the United States, would trigger a global "economic crisis".
But it cannot be denied that the Chinese military is a force that appears strong on paper but has never been tested in actual combat, which easily leads to "catastrophic" strategic miscalculations. Since 1979, China has not participated in any war. Now, almost everyone in the Chinese military has never been on the battlefield. Obviously, we have officially confirmed the combat achievements of the J-10C, yet foreign media openly question our combat capabilities.
Then we would like to ask, although the People's Liberation Army indeed lacks sufficient combat experience, is the combat power of the J-10C fake? In fact, the J-10C is neither the most advanced fighter jet we have, and the air-to-air missiles it uses are still the export version from 2015. Isn't the question of China's combat power better asked of the countries whose fighter jets have been shot down by us? As for other things, in the recent naval exercises in the Taiwan Strait, was the accurate targeting of the PHL191 rocket launcher fake?
Did we really launch a fifth-generation aircraft with electromagnetic catapult on the Fujian aircraft carrier last year? In fact, around the Taiwan Strait, the number of U.S. fighter jets coming has been decreasing, and the number of U.S. warships passing through the Taiwan Strait has significantly dropped. Why is that? Previously, we also publicly reported an incident where we drove away a U.S. fifth-generation fighter jet. Whether this incident is fake should be asked to the U.S. military. Obviously, underestimating our strength and emboldening "Taiwan independence" activists could be the real "catastrophic miscalculation." We will resolve the Taiwan issue, and the U.S. will not come. The U.S. military will not fight to protect "Taiwan independence," and the "Taiwan independence" activists will eventually have to give up this idea.
Original article: toutiao.com/article/1853983525294475/
Statement: This article represents the personal views of the author.