A study of the last 100 years of conflict suggests that air
power dominates warfare. Air power was successfully applied in the Spanish
Civil War, First and Second World Wars, Vietnam War, Six Day War, Yom Kippur,
Gulf War, Operation Iraqi Freedom, Afghanistan 2003 and Libya.
John Warden, asserts Those
who have air power overwhelm those who do not; those who do not have it spend
their energies trying to get it, thwart it or escape it.
Air power will be a decisive factor in the outcome of future wars.
As China flexes its muscles an understanding of the
challenges facing the PLAAF is crucial for India and the world at large. A
study of the operational capabilities of the IAF and the PLAAF has not
previously received a systematic and a rigorous assessment.
The literature on the operational dynamics of PLAAF and IAF
during a war remains sparse and underdeveloped despite a large and growing
volume of work on overall Chinese military capabilities. Understanding both the
IAFs and the PLAAFs
history, organisation, culture and weapons systems and their trajectory into
the near future are important for assessing their capabilities for fighting
wars.
In the context of the escalating Sino-Indian rivalry, this
work sets out to examine how the PLAAF and IAF would perform in a conflict; the
nature of air power disparity between India and China, and whether the existing
numerical disparity between India and China give China a clear and
incontestable advantage.
Air Power in the Indo-Pacific sets out to understand the
interaction between the crucial determinants of modern warfare such as
technology, strategic advantage in high altitude warfare, streamlined
organisation, leadership, weapons platforms, combat experience, force
structures, doctrinal and operational concepts, training, geography, weather
and distance to better understand the war fighting capabilities of the IAF and
PLAAF.
Air Power in the Indo-Pacific: Indian Air Force and Peoples Liberation Army Air Force Capabilities into the 2030s brings
about an understanding of Chinas past and
present approaches to air power and provides a crucial baseline for assessing
future challenges.
It provides a qualitative assessment of the IAF and PLAAF
weapons systems and platforms and battle preparedness. Rare historical
anecdotes and insights pertaining to air power and China are examined.
The books
comprehensive assessment of the forces that drive the PLAAF is a critical
reading for anyone trying to understand air power in the Indo Pacific region
and aims to change the way the world looks at the PLAAF.
This volume is illustrated throughout with original
photographs, and specially commissioned colour artworks and maps.
About the Author
Mangesh Sawant has two Masters’ Degrees, one in
International Affairs from Columbia University, New York where he concentrated
on international security policy, the other in Political Science from the
University of Mumbai.
Mangesh is a scholar practitioner with over 20 years of
international experience and expertise in the fields of international security
and military studies.
He is an expert on the Chinese military (PLA, PLAN, PLAAF
and PLARF) with a focus on weapon systems, organisation, culture, warfighting
capabilities and strategy and tactics.
His articles relating to the Chinese military, geopolitical
risks and warfare have been published in international security and military
journals.