Northeast China – A Northern Theater Air Force unit has executed repeated high-intensity confrontation drills featuring air-to-air engagements, electromagnetic operations, and integrated air-ground coordination. According to official releases from the unit, the focus centers on data-driven debriefs, adversary analysis, structured mentorship, and full systems integration.
Strict Data-Driven Debriefs
Pilots return from missions and immediately enter debrief sessions. Flight instructor Guo Yu directly criticized a pilot using callsign “Peng” for locking radar targets too early, which exposed tactical intent and enabled simulated enemy counter-locks. The unit enforces parameter-based reviews using actual flight data, banning vague language. Sessions systematically dissect air situation assessments and emergency handling to identify root causes and generate new tactics.
Pilot Bai Yingnan once lost the initiative after failing to accurately assess an unknown target. He subsequently established an enemy research group that compiled adversary aircraft performance data, combat records, and conducted frame-by-frame video analysis. All pilots now maintain dedicated research topics on opponent tactics. For regional defense watchers, this emphasis on systematic adversary study and emission control timing aligns closely with the operational requirements of fifth-generation platforms operating as network nodes.
Mentorship and Accelerated Talent Pipeline
Instructor Meng Qingcheng enforces exhaustive pre-flight inspections of every instrument and switch, correcting deviations on the spot and leading demonstration flights for new pilots. In one documented case, a new pilot who missed an instrument anomaly underwent immediate data review and remedial training.
The unit operates an “old guide new” mentoring system. Pilots Bai Yu and Liu Chang, developed under squadron leader Yuan Bo, completed three consecutive years of major exercises, advancing from observers to key roles. They later transferred to a new-type fighter unit and assumed mission planning and tactical research responsibilities. This structured progression from individual skills to broader command roles matches the crew coordination demands seen in twin-seat heavy fighters.
Shift Toward Network-Centric Operations
Pilot and staff officer Fu Shiping proposed weather-adjusted training modifications that enhanced effectiveness in complex meteorological conditions. After excelling in single-aircraft engagements but struggling in multi-domain scenarios involving enemy aviation, surface-to-air missiles, and radar networks, he received staff assignments to build systems-level thinking. He now leads drills incorporating strong electromagnetic interference and multi-batch targets.
The unit regularly conducts cross-training with ground radar and air defense units to synchronize tactics and procedures. In one engagement, pilot Liu Chenggang, facing simulated lock-on, contacted the command node for complete situational awareness rather than engaging independently, then used coordinated support to break the lock and regain superiority.
For regional defense watchers, these operational markers—particularly the transition from 1v1 dominance to functioning as airborne battlefield managers coordinating multiple assets—strongly suggest integration of advanced heavy fighters such as the Shenyang J-16, whose twin-seat configuration supports precisely this network-centric role. The repeated focus on “invisible electromagnetic warfare” and breaking service barriers also hints at concurrent deployment of Chengdu J-20 stealth platforms, which prioritize information superiority and systems integration over traditional dogfighting.
The unit builds individualized training profiles and runs targeted remedial sessions to address skill gaps. Training scenarios deliberately incorporate complex electromagnetic and multi-domain threats.
Sources: Official report from Northern Theater Air Force unit, published by China Military Network – PLA Daily, June 2, 2026.



