China Likely To Deploy “Ultra-Long-Range Systems With Conventional Payload”

Editor’s Note: This piece first appeared at Warrior Maven on August 4th. It is used here with permission. Warrior Maven is a member of Military Content Group (MCG)

A surprise attack on Taiwan, unexpected incursions into the South China Sea, violations of Japanese airspace or continued provocations and aggression against the Philippines are merely a few of the fast-evolving Chinese threats likely being watched closely by the Pentagon. Certainly, efforts to mobilize and strengthen a US-allied deterrence posture in the Pacific are rapidly expanding to include new US-Japan and US-Philippine military alliances, basing, cooperation and training exercises. The US is opening new military bases in the Philippines, expanding its military headquarters in Japan and further solidifying multi-national training and war-preparation exercises.

Given this, the security threats presented by China continue to receive considerable amounts of attention for reasons and are both known and largely self-evident, as the PRC is massively fast tracking its military modernization and rapidly expanding its force size. This includes a staggering increase in its nuclear arsenal, which includes the addition of ground-based ICBM silos throughout mainland China and well-documented expansion of nuclear warheads with multiple re-entry vehicles. These developments continue to be analyzed in the Pentagon’s annual public China report.

Volumes of analysis continue to be written on the growing scope of the Chinese threat, Congress has launched a special bipartisan “select” committee dedicated to tracking the PRC threat and of course the US and its allies are continuing a large military buildup in the Pacific.

Chinese Threat to US Homeland

There is, however, an extremely significant yet perhaps lesser recognized growing Chinese threat cited in recently published US Army intel analysis related to threats to the US homeland. There has been much writing in Pentagon and private analyses about the growing “nuclear” threat to the continental US presented by the PLA Navy’s new long-range JL-3 submarine-launched nuclear missile launched from Jin-class submarines, a weapon reportedly able to travel 4,000 miles to targets. As an upgrade to the current JL-2, the JL-3 is recognized in Pentagon reports as a weapon which can hold Hawaii and even mainland US cities at risk from closer-in areas of the Pacific Ocean. These annual Pentagon reports, called Military and Security Developments Regarding the People’s Republic of China, have over the years cited the JL-3 and documented the size, scope and range of China’s growing arsenal of nuclear and conventional weapons.

Beyond these known threats, however, it appears there also may be other long-range precision conventional missile Chinese threats fast emerging as well, according to the Army’s intel analysis called “The Operational Environment 2024-2034 Large-Scale Combat Operations.” (US Army Training and Doctrine Command, G2)

“The Homeland is likely to no longer be a sanctuary during a future LSCO (Large-Scale Combat Operations) conflict. China, Russia, and other adversaries are investing heavily in hybrid and irregular capabilities, such as information and cyber operations, to attack soft targets and systems within the territory of the United States and its Allies,” the text of the report writes.