I thought it was incredibly obvious that the thing about hypersonic jets was facetious. No, to the best of my knowledge, they do not exist.
Aircraft carriers are giant sitting ducks to submarines and you will enjoy your extended combat radius very briefly before you get sent on a surprise exploratory expedition on the seafloor against a modern submarine fleet. And then your fighter probably takes a UAV to the face.
I don't know why you think Russia doesn't have night-vision equipment, though. They
have night-vision equipment, it's basically functional, we've seen it on spetsnazzers. They just don't
issue it to regular soldiers because their military system is hopelessly moribund and corrupt. Well, I understand they tried to get more equipment into the hands of soldiers at some point, but I don't know to what extent that's worked, probably not very much.
Of course Russia's tank production isn't comparable to the US. That's exactly the kind of big specialized effort I said they're not good at. On the other hand, their production of things that blow up tanks has, unfortunately, been solid. Frankly, modern tanks are not
cost-effective, being designed more for pitched tank-tank battles that never really happen anymore. This is a running theme with modern equipment, because military contractors like money and aren't too fussed if you have to order a new tank because your old one ate an anti-tank mine costing perhaps a couple hundred. In those conditions, you might as well use a T-55; it'll die just as hard, but at least it didn't cost much and it's probably lighter.
I mean, this is the only sane way to evaluate technology. Not "is it functionally the same in its specific category", but "is it actually worth using". The thing about the US producing so many tanks, ships, and planes that blah blah blah is that the era of tanks, ships, and planes, in the conventional sense of those things, is basically over. If the last dozen or so wars around the world,
especially the Nagorno-Karabakh war, haven't convinced you of that, you haven't been paying attention.
I'm not saying NATO couldn't have rolled over Russia if it tried, either.
In context, I said that Russia has a stronger industrial base
than Westerners imagined and that it's not surprising that
what was sent to Ukraine wasn't adequate, because it's not leaps and bounds ahead of what Russia has in any way that matters. And yes, that means including asymmetrical comparisons, like loitering ammunition beats tank. You cannot possibly argue that this is untrue because it happened. We all watched it. Russia has been flinging shells and missiles at Ukrainians in massive numbers for over a year with no sign of running out, even though everyone was sure they'd have to, because this is what they chose to specialize in. And unfortunately, it works.
Although I think it's funny that you specifically called out night vision equipment and tanks when I just read this:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/2023/08/07/a-shortage-of-optics-was-holding-back-russian-tank-production-that-shortage-may-have-ended/?sh=513f21a43dffETA: Look, I'm not trying to be a doomer here, but the facts on the ground are that we didn't do enough, and that sucks, and we're going to need to adapt if we want to beat Russia, which is something military bureaucracies absolutely hate doing. And if this adaptation goes through the traditional military contractor pathway, it's going to take two years to work its way to preliminary proposal status and come out more bloated than Microsoft Office. It's like The_Explorer said to begin with - Russia has turned out to be much nimbler than anyone gave it credit for, and the US has
not invested its resources in nimbleness for a very long time. And we need to start.