China’s J-36 Can Reach Taiwan — the F-47 Can’t

di | Jul 9, 2026 | Aviazione militare, Notizia | 0 commenti

A fighter is only as dangerous as the distance it can cross. On paper, America’s new F-47 is the longest-legged fighter the United States has ever built — and over the one map that matters most, the Western Pacific, it still comes up short. China’s enormous new J-36 does not.

That, at least, is the uncomfortable argument doing the rounds among analysts this month, and while the numbers behind it are a mix of official figures and educated guesswork, the geography underneath it is simply not negotiable.

The problem is not that the F-47 is a bad aircraft. It is that the Pacific is very, very wide.

Quick Facts

J-36China’s large, tailless, three-engine sixth-generation design from Chengdu
J-36 combat radiusRoughly 1,500 nautical miles — an open-source estimate, not confirmed by Beijing
F-47America’s sixth-generation fighter, built by Boeing
F-47 combat radiusOfficially “1,000+” nautical miles
Planned F-47 fleetMore than 185 aircraft
The geographyGuam’s Andersen AFB sits about 1,500 nautical miles from the Taiwan Strait

The Tyranny of Distance

Start with the map, because everything follows from it. The nearest major American air base to Taiwan that is not itself within easy reach of Chinese missiles is Andersen Air Force Base on Guam — roughly 1,500 nautical miles from the Taiwan Strait. A fighter that wants to patrol over the strait and come home has to cover that distance twice.

The F-47’s officially disclosed combat radius is “more than 1,000” nautical miles. That is a genuine leap — roughly double the reach of the F-22 it succeeds. It is also still about 500 miles short of what the Guam-to-Taiwan problem demands on internal fuel alone. The shortfall does not make the mission impossible; it makes it dependent.

An artist rendering of the F-47
America’s answer: the Boeing F-47. Its 1,000-plus-nautical-mile radius is the longest of any U.S. fighter — and still short of the Pacific’s demands. Artist rendering via Wikimedia Commons; no photographs of the aircraft have been released.

Why the F-47 Stops Short

This was a choice, not an oversight. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Allvin has been candid that the service deliberately capped the F-47’s size — and therefore its fuel — to keep the jet affordable enough to buy in useful numbers. A fighter with the range to loiter over Taiwan unrefuelled would be so large and so expensive that the Air Force could only afford a handful.

“Modernization means fielding a collection of assets that provide unique dilemmas for adversaries—matching capabilities to threats—while keeping us on the right side of the cost curve.”
Gen. David Allvin — U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff

It is a defensible bet. A force of 185-plus F-47s backed by more than a thousand cheaper robotic wingmen may well pose a harder problem for China than a tiny fleet of ultra-long-range super-fighters. But it means the F-47’s reach over the strait is bought, mission by mission, from the tanker fleet.

The J-36 has gone from grainy taxi footage to official state media in a matter of months.

The J-36 Plays a Different Game

The J-36 is built around the opposite priority. It is huge for a fighter — a tailless, modified-delta planform with three engines, a configuration that only makes sense if you are optimising for internal fuel and payload rather than dogfighting agility. Open-source estimates credit it with a combat radius in the region of 1,500 nautical miles, though these are inferences from its size, not published specifications, and should be treated with caution.

The strategic point is what that range buys: China can, in theory, fight over Taiwan from air bases on its own mainland, with no vulnerable tanker orbit to protect. Where the American plan leans on aerial refuelling to stretch a deliberately compact fighter, the Chinese plan appears to design the tanker dependency out of the problem entirely.

The Tanker Problem

Which brings the argument to its real crux, and it has little to do with either fighter’s stealth or sensors. Every mile an American fighter cannot fly on its own fuel must be supplied by a tanker — a large, non-stealthy, defenceless aircraft that must orbit for hours. China has spent two decades building very-long-range air-to-air missiles and strike systems whose explicit purpose is to push those tankers so far back that the fighters they feed can no longer reach the fight.

So the headline is provocative but the substance is sober: this is not a duel between two jets, it is a contest between two theories of Pacific geography. The F-47 is a superb aircraft asked to solve an impossible map with the help of fragile tankers. The J-36, if the estimates hold, is an attempt to erase the map problem altogether. Closing that gap — with more tankers, better-defended ones, or forward bases that can survive — is now one of the central puzzles of American airpower.

Sources: 19FortyFive; Air & Space Forces Magazine; The War Zone.

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