
 The  Fascinating Emergence of China's J-20 next-generation combat aircraft  demonstrator in late 2010 has refocused attention on the pace of  military aerospace development in the People's Republic. The carefully  stage-managed revelation of the large and unconventional 'new Chengdu  machine 2001', or J-20, as many are calling it, seems to confirm that  China has grand industrial ambitions and attention-getting operational  requirements.
The  Fascinating Emergence of China's J-20 next-generation combat aircraft  demonstrator in late 2010 has refocused attention on the pace of  military aerospace development in the People's Republic. The carefully  stage-managed revelation of the large and unconventional 'new Chengdu  machine 2001', or J-20, as many are calling it, seems to confirm that  China has grand industrial ambitions and attention-getting operational  requirements.Whether  the '2001 programme' will fulfil any of those aims remains to be seen.  At this early stage there is still more than a hint of amateur dramatics  surrounding the aircraft and the speed with which this secret project  has been exposed to the outside world. All early assessments of its  capabilities should be restrained, but the 2001 programme is  nevertheless the fourth or fifth new combat aircraft development project  in China - as many as those from the rest of the world combined.
Even  before the arrival of the J-20, China was heavily engaged with the  Chengdu J-10 multirole fighter and what could be a significantly  enhanced successor in the shape of the J-10B. At Shenyang the J-11B has  emerged as an 'indigenised' Su-27 with combat capabilities that far  exceed China's original Sukhoi Su-27SK and baseline J-11 aircraft. 
 
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