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by Staff Writers Moscow (Sputnik) Dec 03, 2021
The People's Republic of China (PRC) has developed extensive missile capabilities, including ballistics and hypersonic weapons, but maintains only a very small nuclear arsenal, as well as a no-first-use policy. The US, which lags behind Beijing and Moscow on hypersonics, has claimed their advances are a threat. Speaking at a US Air Force base 250 miles from Chinese territory on Wednesday, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin criticized China's push to develop a new array of hypersonic weapons, claiming they are increasing tensions in the region. "[W]e have concerns about the military capabilities that the PRC continues to pursue, and the pursuit of those capabilities increases tensions in the region, and we know that China conducted a test of a hypersonic weapon on the 27th of July," Austin said at a Wednesday press conference with his South Korean counterpart, Suh Wook, at Osan Air Base. "It just underscores why we consider the PRC to be our pacing challenge. And we'll continue to maintain the capabilities to defend and deter against a range of potential threats from the PRC to ourselves and to our allies," Austin added. Osan serves as the headquarters for the US-South Korean Combined Forces Command, the joint command under which the 28,500 US troops deployed in South Korea would fight alongside their South Korean allies in the event of a war with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) to the north. Austin's visit this week was part of the CFC's annual Security Consultative Meeting, at which Austin and Suh discussed developments in their alliance. In the joint communique the SCM released on Thursday, they for the first time mentioned "the importance of preserving peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait," the 80-mile-wide waterway separating the PRC on the mainland from the Republic of China (RoC), the government that rules Taiwan. The strait has been the site of increased tensions in recent months, as the US sails ships through waters China claims to be internal and pens new deals to support Taiwan's military against China, while Chinese aircraft perform regular drills in airspace off the coast. While the air drills are legal, Taiwan unilaterally claims the right to police the airspace and western media falsely reports them as "incursions." China sees Taiwan as a province in rebellion that's destined to be reunited with the mainland - a position the US supports by way of three communiques in the 1970s and 1980s that laid out the terms of its recognition of the PRC as the sole legitimate Chinese government and not the RoC, which is the last remnant of the Chinese republican government that ruled from 1912 until 1949.
Chinese Hypersonics Beijing has denied the tests were of a FOBS-style weapon, saying they were for a reusable space plane that would save launch costs for its burgeoning space flight program. A FOBS poses a unique threat to a country like the US because it would allow China to put a warhead into a fractional orbit - which travels less than one full trip around the Earth - before deorbiting it at the desired location. With US ballistic missile defenses pointed at the northern and western approaches to the country over the North Pole and the Pacific, a FOBS could slip in the "back door" by traveling over the South Pole before coming around to strike its target from the south, where the US has no missile defenses to speak of. At least, that's how the system developed by the Soviet Union in the 1960s would have worked. However, the Soviet system suffered from many limitations, including being much less accurate than an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) and having to carry a much smaller warhead. It was discontinued in the late 1970s after Soviet strategists determined it wasn't worth the extra trouble, since the US missile defense net wasn't nearly as good as Washington claimed it was.
US Beefing Up Anti-China Policies Biden's administration, which took office in January, released a summary of its own updated global strategy earlier this week in which it pledged to "advance initiatives that contribute to regional stability and deter potential Chinese military aggression and threats from North Korea." Wednesday's joint communique also noted "efforts to establish the conditions for the stable stationing of the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) battery at Camp Carroll." The stationing of the long-range air defense system in South Korea has long been opposed by both locals and China, due to the system's high-powered AN/TPY-2 X-band radar which, according to one US official, can track a "baseball from about 2,900 miles (4,600 kilometers) away," or most of the way across China. A second THAAD system is also deployed on Guam, on the far side of the Philippine Sea from China. Source: RIA Novosti
US Space Force raises alarm over China's orbital hypersonic weapons Moscow (Sputnik) Dec 01, 2021 The Pentagon suggests that China tested a fractional orbital bombardment system (FOBS) earlier this year. According to US military observers, China's alleged new orbital hypersonic glide vehicle weapon poses a huge challenge to the Pentagon since the US does not have active countermeasures to these arms. China's new hypersonic weapon system is orbital in nature and could be able to stay in space for a protracted period of time, claimed US Space Force Lieutenant General Chance Saltzman while delive ... read more
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