PLA scientists propose a plan to destroy US carrier groups from 3,000km away Chinese defense scientists from the National University of Defence Technology published a plan in a peer-reviewed journal outlining a step-by-step strategy to destroy a US carrier group from 3,000 kilometers away. The proposal, led by associate professor Gao Tianyun, addresses the challenge of striking American military assets that have withdrawn to distant locations like Guam, beyond the range of conventional missiles. The plan, detailed in the journal Tactical Missile Technology, describes an anti-ship missile swarm operation under "distributed confrontation" to neutralize the US Navy's ability to use distance as a shield. PLA scientists propose a plan to destroy US carrier groups from 3,000km away China’s military proposes a strategy to attack out-of-reach American military assets as distance becomes a shield Stephen Chen /author/stephen-chen in Beijing United States https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3355495/china-team-drafts-comprehensive-sanctions-list-targeting-us-allies-63-tech-sectors?module=inline&pgtype=article quietly pulls its most precious military assets away from the coasts of Asia, they are falling back to places like Guam in Micronesia, a US island territory far beyond the reach of most conventional missiles. modern warfare https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3354989/ai-massively-increasing-chinas-new-weapon-development-speed-scientists?module=inline&pgtype=article , distance can become a shield and dispersion a weapon. This is the puzzle a team of Chinese defence scientists has been solving. Their answer, published openly in a peer‑reviewed journal, offers a step‑by‑step guide on how to destroy a US carrier group from 3,000km 1,865 miles away, precisely the distance from Shanghai to Guam. anti‑ship missile swarm operation https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3355232/chinese-scientists-create-kill-them-all-algorithm-drone-warfare?module=inline&pgtype=article under distributed confrontation”, comes from the College of International Studies at the National University of Defence Technology in Nanjing. Led by associate professor Gao Tianyun, it was published in Tactical Missile Technology, one of China’s top defence journals, on May 25. For years, the US Navy’s big ships operated relatively close to China in Japan, South Korea, the Philippines and the South China Sea. That proximity made them vulnerable to China’s growing arsenal of “anti‑access/area‑denial” weapons – mid-range ballistic missiles, hypersonic gliders and swarms of cruise missiles.