At 2000-4000Km, it will be worse than Battle of Britain, and completely against your favour.
Your tanking operations will be too small and won't survive. Not to mention Chinese jets will have more numbers, more range, more tanker support, AWACS support, satellite support, SAM support etc. While the American squadrons may likely have none of that, while a portion of the fleet will end up being used as tankers.
The Chinese are closing the capability gap.
Wrong, Chinese jet only have more number and more range if they are close to the coast. If the war is far from the coast (2000-4000km is far from the coast) their number and strength will be nullified by the distant cover. SAM does not goes 2000-4000km outside the coast, unless you put them at sea.
And Battle of Britain does not have aerial refuelling involved. I am talking about Operation Black Buck, which is a surgical strike from Ascension to Falkland Island, using a Vulcan bomber that have 1600 km range on a 8000 km strike.
You will be surprised how capable China is at this.
Check out 0:48
http://www.popsci.com/gaofen-4-worl...s-chinas-great-leap-forward-into-space#page-3
In the Gaofen 4's case, its range of view is a 7,000km by 7,000km box of 49 million square kilometers of Asian land and water in and around China.
The Gaofen 4 is the world's most powerful GEO spy satellite. It has a color image resolution of slightly less than 50 meters (which is enough to track aircraft carriers by their wake at sea) and a thermal imaging resolution of 400m (good for spotting forest fires). It may also have a lower resolution video streaming capacity.
By 2030, the Jilin constellation will have 138 imaging, high-resolution small satellites that provide all weather coverage of any point on Earth, at 10 minute intervals.
And this is stuff that's open source.
Let's not forget that the DF-21D's flight time is not going to be more than 10 min. So the carrier, even at full speed, will not have covered more than 10Km. That kind of distance is not such a big problem for a radar and/or IIR seeker. As mentioned earlier, maneuverability won't do anything here.
explained before, this is not how Satellite work.
I can pick up something on my monitor does not mean I can know its position real time.
read this
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/chin...oups-real-time-position-every-30-mins.479064/
If you have not used satellite image for war you would not know, in reality, satellite cannot track a target in real time given the operational delay. Simply because
1.) Satellite cannot recognize what is an aircraft carrier
2.) Satellite cannot pick up a signal and predict which way the target is going.
3.) It take time to process information.
In this field, when we are using satellite int (SATINT), we always said this intel is valid as of something something, in Chinese term, that time frame is 30 minutes.
Geofan-4 cannot used to track moving target, first, you need to point the satellite in the direction where the carrier is. Without ground radar, it's hard to do.
Then even if you able to put the SAT on top of the carrier, the satellite itself will not know what is a carrier, for them , it's pixel, and it would require a human eyes to see if that is a cargo ship, cruise liner or an aircraft Carrier. Then if you tag the target, the satellite will need to refresh, and it would be next cycle before you can process the image, by then the carrier would already be 10s of miles away, and you will need to restart the process.
No, I'm talking about when the warhead becomes a real threat and easily detectable by a ship. Plus I've considered the warhead to be highly capable. The Aegis should be able to track the BM once it's above radar horizon, that won't change.
again, missile go upward, not over the horizon.
The moment the missile goes up, that is when the AEGIS missile defence start working, and just because the missile went into stratosphere, that does not mean AEGIS stop tracking. Meaning the moment the Missile come back down to earth, it is at that moment the AEGIS intercept once they are in the operational range. and that could still be thousand of kilometre away.
I think China has pratcied to launch multiple cruise ballistic missiles simultaneously from same location ... I have seen the videos so basis of my argument is based on this assumption ... (assumptions can always be right or wrong)
Again, you can of course shoot multiple missile at different spot, but can they be overlapping a target?
You seems to not understanding what I said. You draw a circle, that represent the range of a DF series launcher, and at the rim, pick a spot and draw a dot, that is the carrier location.
Now along the line perpendicular between the missile launcher (Denoted the coast) and target draw another circle somewhere else with the centre along the same line representing another DF launcher, that circle will never touch that dot due to the mathematical properties. denoting that the second circle (The launcher), no matter how or where you draw it, will be out of range of the Carrier.
Now, move the dot (carrier), a bit closer to the centre of the first circle, now if you draw the second circle, the dot will be within the overlapping circle. Which mean both launcher is within range. And the closer the dot (Carrier) get, the more circle you can overlap the target.
The further out the target from the closet launcher, the less launcher you can put to overlap the target and keep all of the launcher within range, at the maximum distant, that can only be one.
Bombers will unlikely to give any real advantage to China in current scenario as China also have capable fighting force and with satellites they monitor every move on career deck so there will be no surprise and ofz China will have superiority ... (assuming there is no F35, F22, J20 or J31 in the game) ...
The problem is that, Again, I assume the carrier is in open ocean, far from Chinese costal support and Chinese Air and Sea borne AWACS is still at their infancy, they could not pick up a strike and direct it in a timely fashion outside the territorial radar coverage.