I think we determined that the "million ton"(over exaggeration for anyone who wants to be nitpicky) skylords accelerating to mach 3 was improbable, but a quick look at current transport aircraft with current technology we can accelerate 500 ton planes to 80% mac one as it is.Didn't we just go through a round of crude calculations that showed no "air cargo ships" would exist?
Even if they did, repurposing them into "crude bombers", yet with the capability to cripple infrastructure is way more difficult than you're suggesting. For one, you'd need to produce all the weapons to arm them, install bombsights and train the crews in doing bomb runs - and run into the fact that "peacetime readiness" does not mean "complete lack of any defences whatsoever". The fact the US has a rather lousy air defence network right now doesn't mean Russia could cripple them with a sneak attack using converted passenger liners.
most likely the "Skylord" class vessel will be a slow semi mobile aircraft carrier, or resupply tankers for vessels and outposts operating in the air. these would be more support vessels as opposed to forward assault vessels, and they would likely move at speeds closer to traditional naval vessels(as those are likely the mass sizes we would be looking at) likely no greater than 100km/h.
My idea was not to raise an object to orbital altitudes but, use the anti gravity units to rapidly ACCELERATE the payloads, as close to escape velocity as it can until it hits its altitude cut off at which point the booster rockets would ignite taking it to orbit, this way the cost to get the payload to escape velocity would be largely negated.That's not how orbits work. Even if antigrav units could proper you all the way to an orbital ALTITUDE, you'd still need to give the payload all the necessary orbital VELOCITY, which would require traditional boosters of only slightly less size than what you'd normally need. You save quite a bit of launch mass on two things: one, aerodynamic drag in the lower atmosphere and two, the fact you can use one type of engine optimized for low-pressure operation (normally rockets use at least two types of engines, because different fuels and configurations work with varying efficiency in and out of atmosphere)
But it's not something that can make a crushing difference, especially if teleporterstanis can use them to replace a space elevator. Then the antigravburgians are down to trying to deny space to the enemy Which might work for LEO (thus, no spy satellites), not so much for GEO. Especially if the teleportstanis get a chance to set up killsats to kill the delivery mechanisms before they can insert the debris into dangerous trajectories.
Also the ability to build a station big enough to house a teleporter(at least the really big ones and any pad big enough to move anything greater than a person or similar size ) would require an almost complete dominance in the field, or to build it in a time of relative peace(in which there would likely be treaties to be signed that would likely prevent building space weapons), because the antigravburgians would likely be building stations and killsats on their own and likely be trying to disrupt said construction efforts.