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China-Japan-Koreas |
China fields new |
2015-01-12 |
![]() The ZTQ, which Beijing apparently developed in order to help defend China’s western land border, is impressive in a lot of ways—and not the least because the U.S. Army, the world’s leading ground combat force, tried and failed for years to acquire a similar vehicle. More and more, Beijing is matching American military capabilities with new warships, stealth fighters and combat helicopters. The ZTQ represents one military niche where China has actually exceeded the Pentagon’s own accomplishments. We don’t know much about the ZTQ aside from what we can glean from the few photos, which have circulated in China’s popular Internet military forums for a few years now. See photos |
Posted by:badanov |
#6 They can be useful, if they're not used as 'tanks'... |
Posted by: Pappy 2015-01-12 11:28 |
#5 Tanks in mountains historically don't fair well. They go too slow, are easily trapped and don't provide anything a good recoiless rifle or rocket launcher can do. Plus with air power and drones, tanks in mountains have almost nowhere to hide unless they are under a mountain which makes the point of bringing tanks into that terrain pretty much moot. |
Posted by: DarthVader 2015-01-12 09:24 |
#4 It looks like a scaled down german tank.![]() |
Posted by: Bright Pebbles 2015-01-12 09:21 |
#3 The functional questions would be: (1) what's the weight distribution on the tracks and (2) how high is the center of gravity? (You haven't had a wake up call until you've seen an armored vehicle come sliding down a hillside at you.) |
Posted by: ed in texas 2015-01-12 07:53 |
#2 Mountain terrain, lighter (thin) armor? Oh yeah, send more of those, we need the scrap metal. |
Posted by: OldSpook 2015-01-12 03:16 |
#1 Terrain choke points and modern shoulder fired antitank weapons (or guided bombs or artillery) probably make those small (or large) tanks a rolling target for a modern ground force. |
Posted by: tipover 2015-01-12 00:32 |