
On the vast ocean, a silent but extremely fierce war is underway – an arms race that could completely change the landscape of future naval warfare.
The United States is leading with a mᴀssive $13 billion investment in the USS Gerald R. Ford – the most advanced super-aircraft carrier in human history. This is not just a warship, but a mobile floating fortress, a living symbol of American military power and intelligence.
With its EMALS electromagnetic catapult system completely replacing the outdated steam catapults, the Ford can launch fighter squadrons into the sky faster, more powerfully, and more continuously than ever before. Its mᴀssive power generation system is also capable of powering all future weapons – from combat lasers to hypersonic missiles – allowing the ship to operate reliably in any intense war scenario.
But while the US focuses on building these colossal “super-fortresses,” China has chosen a completely different path: a strategy of “killing from afar.” Instead of racing to build aircraft carriers, Beijing has invested heavily in long-range anti-carrier weapons, famously known as the “Carrier Killer.” These missiles are designed with a single goal: to neutralize or destroy American supercarriers from a distance, before they can deploy their air force.
Particularly dangerous are China’s hypersonic missiles – exceeding Mach 5, making them virtually undetectable and uninterceptable by current defense technology. They can be launched from land, submarines, or aircraft, creating a multi-layered threat that forces the US Navy to reᴀssess its entire carrier strike strategy.
This is no longer a compeтιтion of the number of aircraft carriers.
This is a confrontation between America’s superior technological power and China’s clever asymmetrical strategy – a game that could determine who will dominate the Pacific in the coming decades.
