The provided sources offer a comprehensive overview of the emerging sixth-generation fighter aircraft, highlighting a fundamental shift in air combat philosophy from individual platforms to networked "system of systems". These advanced aircraft, slated for service around the 2030s, will integrate pervasive artificial intelligence for autonomy and decision-making, next-generation multi-spectral stealth, revolutionary variable-cycle propulsion, and transformative weaponry like directed energy and hypersonic missiles. Several global programs are underway, with the U.S. NGAD and China's J-XX leading the race, followed by the trilateral GCAP (UK, Italy, Japan), while the European FCAS faces internal delays and Russia's PAK DP remains highly speculative. The text emphasizes that the immense cost, technological complexity, and challenges of international collaboration represent significant hurdles, forcing nations to balance the desire for "overmatch" capabilities with the necessity of affordable fleet mass. Ultimately, these systems are poised to redefine air combat by enabling multi-domain operations and playing a central role in great power competition, potentially leading to a state of "mutual air denial" rather than unilateral air dominance.
Research done with the help of artificial intelligence, and presented by two AI-generated hosts.