In the article titled
China's Evolving Reconnaissance-Strike Capabilities, author Ian Easton claims
that after many years of efforts, China has acquired a considerable amount of
cruise missile systems, including the PLA Second Artillery Force's
ground-launched Changjian-10 or Long Sword (CJ-10) land attack cruise missiles
(LACMs), the PLA Navy's ground- and ship-launched Yingji-62 "Eagle
Strike" anti-ship cruise missile, and the PLA Air Force's Yingji-63 and
CJ-20 LACMs.
With up to 500
missiles deployed on 40-55 road-mobile, tri-canister launchers in the Second
Artillery Force, China's strategic CJ-10 LACM may be of particular concern to
US and Japanese defense planners, the report said, as the missile's range of
over 1,500 kilometers can theoretically place all of Japan's main islands under
threat.
The report added
that the PLA Navy's 100 JH-7 fighter bombers and 30 H-6M maritime bombers are
armed with anti-ship cruise missiles which also have a strike radius of more
than 1,500km, while the PLA Air Force has a small number of H-6K bombers that
could strike as far as the US territory of Guam.
The advanced
missiles have significant tactical and strategic meaning, the report said, as
cruise missiles are technologically challenging to defend against compared to
ballistic missiles because they can strike from any angle and fly at low
altitudes.
"Initially,
the only theater ballistic missile in the PLA arsenal that could reach Japan
was the medium-range Dongfeng-21C (DF-21C)," the report said, but
according to Taiwanese intelligence officials the PLA has also begun deploying
the DF-16, a new medium-range ballistic missile for
"counter-intervention" missions.
According to the
report, the US Department of Defense assessed that the PLA is developing
intermediate-range ballistic missiles with ranges of up to 5,000 km, meaning
they could eventually threaten Guam, the Marianas, Palau, northern Australia,
Alaska and US bases in the Middle East. If the Chinese program is successful,
even Hawaii and the west coast of the US could be threatened by ICBMs by the
early-to-mid 2020s, the report said.
No comments:
Post a Comment