More to the point, a goodly deal of Chinese defensive strategy has been focused on "How do we target and sink those American giant nuclear floating cities if shit gets real?". They were getting pretty good at having multiple ways to overwhelm and sink a single large target like that.
Suddenly replace said single large target with numerous smaller targets, all capable of fielding an air wing of drones. Hell, if the next-gen drones are mostly autonomous, you don't even have to protect the operators or maintain a line of communication to the drones (cyberattack/disrupting GPS and communications was the second major area of Chinese strategic development, the qi (unorthodox or suprise) to the zheng (orthodox or conventional) of mounting a large swarm attack.
Granted, we're still at least a decade away from purpose-built drone carriers. But it has the potential to completely reshape our naval power, and in a good direction. We'd been starting to starting to adopt the WWII Axis mindset of having a handful of high-value megavehicles, when what won the war was the Allies' zerg rush of inferior (but replaceable) pocket carriers and light tanks.
Replacing big, hard-to-replace hard-to-defend megacarriers with a crew of tens of thousands with pocket drone carriers with much smaller crews....good strategic direction. Also allows you to calibrate your force levels when you're dealing with a crisis situation and becomes much easier to be everywhere at once. Just my .02.