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China Upgrading Nuclear Forces

April 12, 2005 :: Washington Post :: News

The Washington Post reports on China’s upgrades to its nuclear forces, which it finances with a growing military budget, kept at a high percentage of its GDP. Improvements have been and are being made to its nuclear submarines, its intercontinental missile forces (such as the DF-31, the JL-2, and the DF-41):

The Type 094 nuclear missile submarine, launched last July to replace a trouble-prone Xia-class vessel, can carry 16 intercontinental ballistic missiles. Married with the newly developed Julang-2 missile, which has a range of more than 5,000 miles and the ability to carry independently targeted warheads, the 094 will give China a survivable nuclear deterrent against the continental United States, according to “Modernizing China’s Military,” a study by David Shambaugh of George Washington University.

In addition, the Dongfeng-31 solid-fuel mobile ballistic missile, a three-stage, land-based equivalent of the Julang-2, has been deployed in recent years to augment the approximately 20 Dongfeng-5 liquid-fuel missiles already in service, according to academic specialists citing U.S. intelligence reports.

It will be joined in coming years by an 8,000-mile Dongfeng-41, these reports said, putting the entire United States within range of land-based Chinese ICBMs as well. “The main purpose of that is not to attack the United States,” Lin said. “The main purpose is to throw a monkey wrench into the decision-making process in Washington, to make the Americans think, and think again, about intervening in Taiwan, and by then the Chinese have moved in.” (Article)

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