Et fly som likner veldig ble fotografert over California i fjor. Bildet ble gjengitt i AW&ST. Her sakset fra Twitter:
(Red.)
The Philippines sits
between the South China Sea and the Philippine Sea, two contentious and highly
surveilled bodies of water that regularly see large amounts of military
activity, especially Chinese and American. All types of military aircraft
constantly frequent the skies above both seas, from bombers to drones, but on
September 2nd, at around 6:15 AM local time, landscape photographer Michael Fugnit captured something
very unique in his lens—what appears to be a stealthy flying wing aircraft with
a diamond-shaped fuselage and slender wings, a centralized exhaust, potentially
featuring twin engines, and a ventral fuselage bulge.
Fugnit tells The War Zone that he was up early
in Santa Magdalena to catch the perfect sunrise when he noticed an aircraft
overhead moving along at a good clip. The single image he took showed something
that is unlike any normal commercial or military aircraft that usually criss-cross
the skies over the region on a daily basis.
MICHAEL
FUGNIT
The original
image Michael provided. He states that it was taken by a "Fujifilmxt2
+50-200mm" which, combined with high-altitude and the early morning
lighting, would explain the small resolution and grainy nature of the image.
We must state that we cannot authenticate the
image at this time, although we gave it a cursory examination in photoshop and
nothing major stood out. We do not have any reason to believe the photographer
fabricated it, either, although it is only prudent to underscore that the
factual status of the photograph could change. We will continue to examine the
image using various tools and are reaching out to other photo experts to give
us their opinion.
GOOGLE
MAPS
The location
where the image was taken, smack-dab in the middle of two of the most strategic
and tense bodies of water in the Pacific Theater.
At first glance, the
aircraft depicted looks very much like the one seen in the supposed sighting of
the so-called RQ-180 Sentinel high-altitude, long-endurance, very
low-observable drone from last November. The RQ-180, which
you can read our in-depth take on in this past special feature, is thought to be in very
limited operation at this time as it continues with its clandestine
development. Flying the aircraft in this area of the world would make sense
because it is precisely the type of environment it was designed to operate in,
but it could also just be transiting to another location, including back to the United States.
Also the timing, at sunrise,
crossing the last major inhabited area before heading out into the desolate
Pacific would make sense. The aircraft is thought to fly out of Area 51 in
Nevada and Edwards Air Force Base in California, on extremely long-duration
missions, but the isolated island of Diego Garcia, in the Indian Ocean, would
be another operating location as it expands its operations. Special facilities there can support the B-2
Spirit stealth bomber and could likely be used to support the RQ-180, as well.
The locale is also known for its use to support clandestine aircraft
activities. Andersen Air Force Base on Guam is another potential operating
location, but that is likely too high-profile for this stage of the aircraft's
development.
HANGAR
B PRODUCTIONS
Our notional
illustration of what the RQ-180 could look like based on publicly disclosed
information about very similar concepts from Northrop Grumman that seem to have
predated the program.
While the aircraft appears
to be a good match to what we think the U.S. stealth HALE (high altitude, long
endurance) drone known as the RQ-180 looks like, and the timing and location do
make some sense, it is not the only possibility. China has a large number of
stealthy flying-wing aircraft programs ongoing of all different sizes. Beyond
its H-20 stealth bomber program, many stealth drone programs are publically underway, including a concept that
is broadly similar to the RQ-180, known as the CH-7 Rainbow. China's Star Shadow, which has been in
development for years, may also have some similarities to the shape we see in
the image. Once again, that is one of a number of potential Chinese stealth drones, some of which we know
have been in flight testing for years, and there are others that surely remain
cloaked in secrecy, that could potentially account for this sighting.
CHINESE
INTERNET
A mockup of
the CASC CH-7 UCAV at the 2018 Zhuhai airshow.
Because we do not know the approximate altitude
the aircraft was flying at, it is possible that this may not have been a
strategic platform, it could be something a bit smaller that flies for long periods
of time at medium altitudes, instead. Regardless, the appearance of Chinese
stealthy drones will become commonplace in the region in the years to come, but
this could have been a clandestine operation of one of these systems that has
made it at least into an operational testing state. Collecting critical
intelligence from a penetrating reconnaissance platform on the countries China
has a standing dispute over the South China Sea with does makes sense.
As for the possibility
that this was China's H-20 stealth bomber, the chances of that are
very low. The aircraft has not been unveiled and is not even thought to be in
major flight testing, let alone flying missions over foreign countries. What
about a B-2 Spirit transiting the area? The image shows discreet features that
are not indicative of the B-2. If the image is legitimate, the chances of it
being a B-2 with multiple illusions occurring to make its planform and wing
design look very different are quite remote. Also, at least at the time of
publishing, radio interceptors and plane trackers have not noticed any B-2s
moving through the region. The RQ-170 is another candidate. We know it has been
adapted to work in the maritime domain and it has spent time in Asia, but that would be an odd
place for it to be and the wings don't look right. Still, it is a possibility
to consider.
With that being said,
there are two other wrinkles in this story. First, the U.S., U.K., India,
Japan, and Australia just held one of their biggest joint exercises ever in the
Phillippine Sea. This would have been of the very utmost interest to China.
While those activities wrapped up officially by the end of August, assets were
likely still in the region when this aircraft was sighted. The same could be
true for any Chinese warships movements in the same area, which would be of
very high U.S. interest.
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