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China's drive for military supremacy: Beijing's armoury of weapons and the terrifying missiles so high-tech that they are almost impossible to stop

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China's drive for military supremacy: Beijing's armoury of weapons and the terrifying missiles so high-tech that they are almost impossible to stop
  • China is spending huge sums to create super-fast hypersonic missiles
  • It has created an army of drones and has an estimated 350 nuclear warheads
  • Universities play a central role in maximising the country's military power
By IAN BIRRELL AND GLEN OWEN FOR THE MAIL ON SUNDAY

PUBLISHED: 09:18 GMT, 7 February 2021 | UPDATED: 09:21 GMT, 7 February 2021

HYPERSONICS
China is spending huge sums to create hypersonic missiles that will go so fast (up to twenty times the speed of sound) that military chiefs believe they will be invulnerable to any form of defence.

Indeed, some analysts fear that human capability to respond to such lethal weapons will be inadequate and that the only way to protect against them would be to rely on artificial intelligence and computer systems.

Travelling several miles a second as they deliver surprise attacks within minutes of being launched, they have been described as a 'game-changer' for warfare.

38981880-9233269-image-a-37_1612688751394.jpg

A Dongfeng-41 intercontinental strategic nuclear missiles group formation marches to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the PRC in Beijing, October 1, 2019

38981984-9233269-image-a-39_1612689183479.jpg

A DF-17 missile is presented during a military parade at Tiananmen Square on October 1, 2019


Although America, too, has such Star Wars-style weapons in development, General John E. Hyten, commander of US Strategic Command, told a Senate committee three years ago: 'We don't have any defence that could deny the employment of such a weapon against us.'

Such missiles, capable of carrying nuclear warheads, would deliver precision attacks on people, vehicles and buildings.

To test such weapons, the Beijing government said three years ago it was building a wind tunnel that simulated conditions up to 25 times the speed of sound. And a contractor has said it has carried out a six-minute test flight for a hypersonic missile.

The complexities of developing hypersonics – using sophisticated sensors, guidance systems and innovative propulsion methods – have been compared to building the atomic bomb.

GRAPHENE
This is a revolutionary material with enormous defence and manufacturing potential. One atom thick and the thinnest and lightest material known to man, it conducts heat, absorbs light, stretches and is 200 times stronger than steel.

It was invented by researchers in 2004 at Manchester University – with China's President Xi Jinping having made an official visit to their lab.

Among its military applications are as coatings on ballistic missiles, wiring in hypersonic vehicles exposed to high temperatures, camouflage of vehicles and body armour for troops.


Chinese reports suggest that the Z-10 attack helicopter – a rival to Boeing's Apache – has been equipped with graphene armour developed at the Beijing Institute of Aeronautical Materials. The institute has ties to three universities in Britain, where it collaborates on two centres specialising in research into the use of graphene in the aerospace industry.

Chinese media have reported plans to use graphene coatings on military installations on artificial islands built in the South China Sea, an area where Beijing has controversially deployed Jin-class ballistic missile submarines armed with nuclear missiles.

One of the most sinister recent trends in China has been the creation of a surveillance state that seeks to control 1.4 billion citizens through a constant watch over their movements, thoughts and words.

People are tracked via a massive network of street cameras, facial recognition technologies, biometric data, official records, artificial intelligence and monitoring of online activities as mundane as things like shopping and takeaway food ordering habits.

The most extreme example is in the Western province of Xinjiang, where Uighurs and other Muslim minorities are under 24/7 surveillance.

Much of the network was developed by the state-owned China Electronics Technology Group Corporation, which supports work at four Chinese universities with ties to seven British universities.

CHINESE UNIVERSITIES
As part of President Xi's bid for China's global supremacy, he has employed a so-called 'military-civil fusion' strategy that involves universities playing a central role in maximising the country's military power.

China's constitution also stipulates that all new technologies, even if developed by the private sector, must, by law, be shared with the People's Liberation Army.

A key research institution is the National University of Defense Technology, in Hunan, which is controlled by the military and specialises in hypersonics, drones, supercomputers, radar and navigation systems.

It has links with eight British universities, including a formal collaboration with one world-renowned seat of learning.

38981876-9233269-image-a-35_1612688743041.jpg

The Beijing government is developing swarms of 'suicide' drones to hover in the sky as they locate their target. Pictured, stock photo


Eight other UK universities have ties with the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, which spends 60 per cent of its research budget on defence activities.

Another important centre is the Harbin Institute of Technology. It has a joint research lab with the nation's leading ballistic missile manufacturer and has links with three British universities.

DRONE SWARMS
The Beijing government is developing swarms of 'suicide' drones to hover in the sky as they locate their target – while communicating with each other and co-ordinating their movements without any human input.

This marks the next era of robotic warfare, with autonomous weapons replacing current drones that have to be pre-programmed or are remote-controlled.

The United States and Israel are also working on such technology, while Britain, too, tested a swarm of 20 drones last month with sorties from RAF Spadeadam in Cumbria.

The advanced technology uses computer algorithms – often modelled on biological studies of insects and fish – to create self-navigating drone squadrons.

NUCLEAR WEAPONS
In total, China is estimated to have 350 nuclear warheads, including 204 on operational long-range missiles fired from land-based launchers, 48 on submarines and 20 'gravity bombs' to be dropped from aircraft.

A recent Pentagon report warned that, in its bid to catch up with Russia and the US, Beijing plans to double its nuclear arsenal over the next decade as part of President Xi's drive towards global dominance.

Many of these weapons are being developed by China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, a massive state-owned conglomerate that has links with at least five UK universities.

 
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China's drive for military supremacy: Beijing's armoury of weapons and the terrifying missiles so high-tech that they are almost impossible to stop
  • China is spending huge sums to create super-fast hypersonic missiles
  • It has created an army of drones and has an estimated 350 nuclear warheads
  • Universities play a central role in maximising the country's military power
By IAN BIRRELL AND GLEN OWEN FOR THE MAIL ON SUNDAY

PUBLISHED: 09:18 GMT, 7 February 2021 | UPDATED: 09:21 GMT, 7 February 2021

HYPERSONICS
China is spending huge sums to create hypersonic missiles that will go so fast (up to twenty times the speed of sound) that military chiefs believe they will be invulnerable to any form of defence.

Indeed, some analysts fear that human capability to respond to such lethal weapons will be inadequate and that the only way to protect against them would be to rely on artificial intelligence and computer systems.

Travelling several miles a second as they deliver surprise attacks within minutes of being launched, they have been described as a 'game-changer' for warfare.

38981880-9233269-image-a-37_1612688751394.jpg

A Dongfeng-41 intercontinental strategic nuclear missiles group formation marches to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the PRC in Beijing, October 1, 2019

38981984-9233269-image-a-39_1612689183479.jpg

A DF-17 missile is presented during a military parade at Tiananmen Square on October 1, 2019


Although America, too, has such Star Wars-style weapons in development, General John E. Hyten, commander of US Strategic Command, told a Senate committee three years ago: 'We don't have any defence that could deny the employment of such a weapon against us.'

Such missiles, capable of carrying nuclear warheads, would deliver precision attacks on people, vehicles and buildings.

To test such weapons, the Beijing government said three years ago it was building a wind tunnel that simulated conditions up to 25 times the speed of sound. And a contractor has said it has carried out a six-minute test flight for a hypersonic missile.

The complexities of developing hypersonics – using sophisticated sensors, guidance systems and innovative propulsion methods – have been compared to building the atomic bomb.

GRAPHENE
This is a revolutionary material with enormous defence and manufacturing potential. One atom thick and the thinnest and lightest material known to man, it conducts heat, absorbs light, stretches and is 200 times stronger than steel.

It was invented by researchers in 2004 at Manchester University – with China's President Xi Jinping having made an official visit to their lab.

Among its military applications are as coatings on ballistic missiles, wiring in hypersonic vehicles exposed to high temperatures, camouflage of vehicles and body armour for troops.


Chinese reports suggest that the Z-10 attack helicopter – a rival to Boeing's Apache – has been equipped with graphene armour developed at the Beijing Institute of Aeronautical Materials. The institute has ties to three universities in Britain, where it collaborates on two centres specialising in research into the use of graphene in the aerospace industry.

Chinese media have reported plans to use graphene coatings on military installations on artificial islands built in the South China Sea, an area where Beijing has controversially deployed Jin-class ballistic missile submarines armed with nuclear missiles.

One of the most sinister recent trends in China has been the creation of a surveillance state that seeks to control 1.4 billion citizens through a constant watch over their movements, thoughts and words.

People are tracked via a massive network of street cameras, facial recognition technologies, biometric data, official records, artificial intelligence and monitoring of online activities as mundane as things like shopping and takeaway food ordering habits.

The most extreme example is in the Western province of Xinjiang, where Uighurs and other Muslim minorities are under 24/7 surveillance.

Much of the network was developed by the state-owned China Electronics Technology Group Corporation, which supports work at four Chinese universities with ties to seven British universities.

CHINESE UNIVERSITIES
As part of President Xi's bid for China's global supremacy, he has employed a so-called 'military-civil fusion' strategy that involves universities playing a central role in maximising the country's military power.

China's constitution also stipulates that all new technologies, even if developed by the private sector, must, by law, be shared with the People's Liberation Army.

A key research institution is the National University of Defense Technology, in Hunan, which is controlled by the military and specialises in hypersonics, drones, supercomputers, radar and navigation systems.

It has links with eight British universities, including a formal collaboration with one world-renowned seat of learning.

38981876-9233269-image-a-35_1612688743041.jpg

The Beijing government is developing swarms of 'suicide' drones to hover in the sky as they locate their target. Pictured, stock photo


Eight other UK universities have ties with the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, which spends 60 per cent of its research budget on defence activities.

Another important centre is the Harbin Institute of Technology. It has a joint research lab with the nation's leading ballistic missile manufacturer and has links with three British universities.

DRONE SWARMS
The Beijing government is developing swarms of 'suicide' drones to hover in the sky as they locate their target – while communicating with each other and co-ordinating their movements without any human input.

This marks the next era of robotic warfare, with autonomous weapons replacing current drones that have to be pre-programmed or are remote-controlled.

The United States and Israel are also working on such technology, while Britain, too, tested a swarm of 20 drones last month with sorties from RAF Spadeadam in Cumbria.

The advanced technology uses computer algorithms – often modelled on biological studies of insects and fish – to create self-navigating drone squadrons.

NUCLEAR WEAPONS
In total, China is estimated to have 350 nuclear warheads, including 204 on operational long-range missiles fired from land-based launchers, 48 on submarines and 20 'gravity bombs' to be dropped from aircraft.

A recent Pentagon report warned that, in its bid to catch up with Russia and the US, Beijing plans to double its nuclear arsenal over the next decade as part of President Xi's drive towards global dominance.

Many of these weapons are being developed by China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, a massive state-owned conglomerate that has links with at least five UK universities.






WOW!!!!!!!.............China is now approaching the stage where it is comparable to both america and Russia in terms of the indigenous development and inventions of advanced high tech weapon systems.
 
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WOW!!!!!!!.............China is now approaching the stage where it is comparable to both america and Russia in terms of the indigenous development and inventions of advanced high tech weapon systems.

sorry to burst your bubble but don't hold your breath. America has a working 6th gen fighter while these people haven't even matched them in 5th fighters (anyone who thinks the J series matches f22 needs a shrink). These guys are huffing and puffing for a trip to the moon 60 years after then yanks- and they're trying to go to mars. Far from reducing the gap, the gap is actually increasing.
 
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sorry to burst your bubble but don't hold your breath. America has a working 6th gen fighter while these people haven't even matched them in 5th fighters (anyone who thinks the J series matches f22 needs a shrink). These guys are huffing and puffing for a trip to the moon 60 years after then yanks- and they're trying to go to mars. Far from reducing the gap, the gap is actually increasing.
All American gernerals believe China is fast closing the gap and Indians believe the gap is widenning, who should we believe...?
 
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sorry to burst your bubble but don't hold your breath. America has a working 6th gen fighter while these people haven't even matched them in 5th fighters (anyone who thinks the J series matches f22 needs a shrink). These guys are huffing and puffing for a trip to the moon 60 years after then yanks- and they're trying to go to mars. Far from reducing the gap, the gap is actually increasing.



Really? I though you indians were working on a 10th generation fighter jet that is a 100 years ahead of america, Russia and China......... :disagree:
 
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Indians are all talking, one can't progress by discrediting others.
It all boils down to the economy, once your economy is there, your military will be there soon enough, once your economy is down, your military will be down with it. That's why China always puts developing the economy first.
 
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All American gernerals believe China is fast closing the gap and Indians believe the gap is widenning, who should we believe...?

No American general believes China is closing any gap. But they're the type that will get working even if an idea of the sort if floated.
Really? I though you indians were working on a 10th generation fighter jet that is a 100 years ahead of america, Russia and China......... :disagree:

Thank you for your valuable contribution to the thread.
 
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sorry to burst your bubble but don't hold your breath. America has a working 6th gen fighter while these people haven't even matched them in 5th fighters (anyone who thinks the J series matches f22 needs a shrink). These guys are huffing and puffing for a trip to the moon 60 years after then yanks- and they're trying to go to mars. Far from reducing the gap, the gap is actually increasing.
Painful truth for some here. The only way enemies of china will stop it is by developing capabilities to punish china the same way..

Hypothetically, China with its 300 nuclear warheads can destroy every urban population centers in North America, but US with its 5000 warheads can destroy every village in China. What does China have to stop any US weapons?
 
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No American general believes China is closing any gap. But they're the type that will get working even if an idea of the sort if floated.
LOl, who do you think that you can speak for US generals?

China’s military closing technology gap with the US, says American air force chief
Pentagon: China Is 'Closing the Gap' in Air Power with U.S.
New missile gap leaves U.S. scrambling to counter China
 
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LOl, who do you think that you can speak for US generals?

China’s military closing technology gap with the US, says American air force chief
Pentagon: China Is 'Closing the Gap' in Air Power with U.S.
New missile gap leaves U.S. scrambling to counter China
Give me example of a combat proven Chinese weapon system..

I am putting forward F15 with a 120 to nill kill ratio
 
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Give me example of a combat proven Chinese weapon system..

I am putting forward F15 with a 120 to nill kill ratio
Ask US generals, and what makes Indians think they can speak for American generals?
I am putting forward F15 with a 120 to nill kill ratio
You can put the ratio to 100 billion to zero, Lol.,.You are Indian.
 
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Ask US generals, and what makes Indians think they can speak for American generals?

You can put the ratio to 100 billion to zero, Lol.,.You are Indian.
I am an Indian Australian, can speak for anyone 😀😀
 
. .
China's drive for military supremacy: Beijing's armoury of weapons and the terrifying missiles so high-tech that they are almost impossible to stop
  • China is spending huge sums to create super-fast hypersonic missiles
  • It has created an army of drones and has an estimated 350 nuclear warheads
  • Universities play a central role in maximising the country's military power
By IAN BIRRELL AND GLEN OWEN FOR THE MAIL ON SUNDAY

PUBLISHED: 09:18 GMT, 7 February 2021 | UPDATED: 09:21 GMT, 7 February 2021

HYPERSONICS
China is spending huge sums to create hypersonic missiles that will go so fast (up to twenty times the speed of sound) that military chiefs believe they will be invulnerable to any form of defence.

Indeed, some analysts fear that human capability to respond to such lethal weapons will be inadequate and that the only way to protect against them would be to rely on artificial intelligence and computer systems.

Travelling several miles a second as they deliver surprise attacks within minutes of being launched, they have been described as a 'game-changer' for warfare.

38981880-9233269-image-a-37_1612688751394.jpg

A Dongfeng-41 intercontinental strategic nuclear missiles group formation marches to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the PRC in Beijing, October 1, 2019

38981984-9233269-image-a-39_1612689183479.jpg

A DF-17 missile is presented during a military parade at Tiananmen Square on October 1, 2019


Although America, too, has such Star Wars-style weapons in development, General John E. Hyten, commander of US Strategic Command, told a Senate committee three years ago: 'We don't have any defence that could deny the employment of such a weapon against us.'

Such missiles, capable of carrying nuclear warheads, would deliver precision attacks on people, vehicles and buildings.

To test such weapons, the Beijing government said three years ago it was building a wind tunnel that simulated conditions up to 25 times the speed of sound. And a contractor has said it has carried out a six-minute test flight for a hypersonic missile.

The complexities of developing hypersonics – using sophisticated sensors, guidance systems and innovative propulsion methods – have been compared to building the atomic bomb.

GRAPHENE
This is a revolutionary material with enormous defence and manufacturing potential. One atom thick and the thinnest and lightest material known to man, it conducts heat, absorbs light, stretches and is 200 times stronger than steel.

It was invented by researchers in 2004 at Manchester University – with China's President Xi Jinping having made an official visit to their lab.

Among its military applications are as coatings on ballistic missiles, wiring in hypersonic vehicles exposed to high temperatures, camouflage of vehicles and body armour for troops.


Chinese reports suggest that the Z-10 attack helicopter – a rival to Boeing's Apache – has been equipped with graphene armour developed at the Beijing Institute of Aeronautical Materials. The institute has ties to three universities in Britain, where it collaborates on two centres specialising in research into the use of graphene in the aerospace industry.

Chinese media have reported plans to use graphene coatings on military installations on artificial islands built in the South China Sea, an area where Beijing has controversially deployed Jin-class ballistic missile submarines armed with nuclear missiles.

One of the most sinister recent trends in China has been the creation of a surveillance state that seeks to control 1.4 billion citizens through a constant watch over their movements, thoughts and words.

People are tracked via a massive network of street cameras, facial recognition technologies, biometric data, official records, artificial intelligence and monitoring of online activities as mundane as things like shopping and takeaway food ordering habits.

The most extreme example is in the Western province of Xinjiang, where Uighurs and other Muslim minorities are under 24/7 surveillance.

Much of the network was developed by the state-owned China Electronics Technology Group Corporation, which supports work at four Chinese universities with ties to seven British universities.

CHINESE UNIVERSITIES
As part of President Xi's bid for China's global supremacy, he has employed a so-called 'military-civil fusion' strategy that involves universities playing a central role in maximising the country's military power.

China's constitution also stipulates that all new technologies, even if developed by the private sector, must, by law, be shared with the People's Liberation Army.

A key research institution is the National University of Defense Technology, in Hunan, which is controlled by the military and specialises in hypersonics, drones, supercomputers, radar and navigation systems.

It has links with eight British universities, including a formal collaboration with one world-renowned seat of learning.

38981876-9233269-image-a-35_1612688743041.jpg

The Beijing government is developing swarms of 'suicide' drones to hover in the sky as they locate their target. Pictured, stock photo


Eight other UK universities have ties with the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, which spends 60 per cent of its research budget on defence activities.

Another important centre is the Harbin Institute of Technology. It has a joint research lab with the nation's leading ballistic missile manufacturer and has links with three British universities.

DRONE SWARMS
The Beijing government is developing swarms of 'suicide' drones to hover in the sky as they locate their target – while communicating with each other and co-ordinating their movements without any human input.

This marks the next era of robotic warfare, with autonomous weapons replacing current drones that have to be pre-programmed or are remote-controlled.

The United States and Israel are also working on such technology, while Britain, too, tested a swarm of 20 drones last month with sorties from RAF Spadeadam in Cumbria.

The advanced technology uses computer algorithms – often modelled on biological studies of insects and fish – to create self-navigating drone squadrons.

NUCLEAR WEAPONS
In total, China is estimated to have 350 nuclear warheads, including 204 on operational long-range missiles fired from land-based launchers, 48 on submarines and 20 'gravity bombs' to be dropped from aircraft.

A recent Pentagon report warned that, in its bid to catch up with Russia and the US, Beijing plans to double its nuclear arsenal over the next decade as part of President Xi's drive towards global dominance.

Many of these weapons are being developed by China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, a massive state-owned conglomerate that has links with at least five UK universities.

This is one of this high tech impossible to stop missiles I think
1612707924031.png
 
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