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		Special Report: New missile gap leaves 
		U.S. scrambling to counter China 
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		 [April 26, 2019] 
		By David Lague and Benjamin Kang Lim 
 ZHUHAI, China (Reuters) - China's powerful 
		military is considered to be a master at concealing its intentions. But 
		there is no secret about how it plans to destroy American aircraft 
		carriers if rivalry becomes war.
 
 At November's biennial air show in the southern city of Zhuhai, the 
		biggest state-owned missile maker, China Aerospace Science and Industry 
		Corporation Ltd, screened an animation showing a hostile "blue force," 
		comprising an aircraft carrier, escort ships and strike aircraft, 
		approaching "red force" territory.
 
 On a giant screen, the animation showed a barrage of the Chinese 
		company's missiles launched from "red force" warships, submarines, shore 
		batteries and aircraft wreaking havoc on the escort vessels around the 
		carrier. In a final salvo, two missiles plunge onto the flight deck of 
		the carrier and a third slams into the side of the hull near the bow.
 
 The fate of the ship is an unmistakable message to an America that has 
		long dominated the globe from its mighty aircraft carriers and sprawling 
		network of hundreds of bases. China's military is now making giant 
		strides toward replacing the United States as the supreme power in Asia. 
		With the Pentagon distracted by almost two decades of costly war in the 
		Middle East and Afghanistan, the Chinese military, the People's 
		Liberation Army (PLA), has exploited a period of sustained budget 
		increases and rapid technical improvement to build and deploy an arsenal 
		of advanced missiles.
 
		 
		
 Many of these missiles are specifically designed to attack the aircraft 
		carriers and bases that form the backbone of U.S. military dominance in 
		the region and which for decades have protected allies including Japan, 
		South Korea and Taiwan.
 
 Across almost all categories of these weapons, based on land, loaded on 
		strike aircraft or deployed on warships and submarines, China's missiles 
		rival or outperform their counterparts in the armories of the United 
		States and its allies, according to current and former U.S. military 
		officers with knowledge of PLA test launches, Taiwanese and Chinese 
		military analysts, and technical specifications published in China's 
		state-controlled media.
 
 See the interactive version here: https://reut.rs/2Z8DetC
 
 China has also seized a virtual monopoly in one class of conventional 
		missiles – land-based, intermediate-range ballistic and cruise missiles.
 
 Under the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, a Cold War-era 
		agreement aimed at reducing the threat of nuclear conflict, the United 
		States and Russia are banned from deploying this class of missiles, with 
		a range between 500 and 5,500 kilometers (3,418 miles). But Beijing, 
		unrestrained by the INF Treaty, is deploying them in massive numbers.
 
 This includes so-called carrier killer missiles like the DF-21D, which 
		can target aircraft carriers and other warships underway at sea at a 
		range of up to 1,500 kilometers, according to Chinese and Western 
		military analysts. If effective, these missiles would give China a 
		destructive capability no other military can boast. China's advantage in 
		this class of missiles is likely to remain for the foreseeable future, 
		despite U.S. President Donald Trump's decision in February to withdraw 
		from the treaty in six months.
 
 China is also making rapid strides in developing so-called hypersonic 
		missiles, which can maneuver sharply and travel at five times the speed 
		of sound (or even faster). Currently, the United States has no defenses 
		against a missile like this, according to Pentagon officials.
 
		
		 
		
 China's Ministry of National Defense and China Aerospace Science and 
		Industry Corporation did not respond to questions from Reuters about 
		Beijing's missile capabilities. The U.S. Indo-Pacific Command and the 
		Pentagon had no comment.
 
 THE MISSILE GAP
 
 China's growing missile arsenal hasn't yet been proven in a real-world 
		clash, and some Chinese officials play down their advances. But under 
		the Trump administration, Washington has come to view China as a rival 
		determined to displace the United States in Asia. This modern-day 
		missile gap, the administration believes, is emerging as one of the 
		biggest dangers to American military supremacy in Asia since the end of 
		the Cold War. The Pentagon is now scrambling for new weapons and 
		strategies to counter the PLA's rocket arsenal.
 
 "We know that China has the most advanced ballistic missile force in the 
		world," said James Fanell, a retired U.S. Navy captain and former senior 
		intelligence officer with the U.S. Pacific Fleet. "They have the 
		capacity to overwhelm the defensive systems we are pursuing."
 
 Fanell was sidelined by the Pentagon ahead of his 2015 retirement, after 
		warning about the Chinese build-up at a time when President Barack Obama 
		was seeking cooperation with Beijing. Today, Pentagon policy hews more 
		closely to his views that China intends to displace the United States as 
		Asia's dominant power.
 
 Chinese military brass agree they can now keep American carriers at bay. 
		Six people in China interviewed by Reuters, including retired PLA 
		officers and a person with ties to the Beijing leadership, said China's 
		enhanced missile capability was a great leveler and would serve to deter 
		the United States from getting too close to Chinese shores.
 
 "We cannot defeat the United States at sea," a retired PLA colonel said 
		in an interview. The United States has 11 aircraft carriers and China 
		has just two. "But we have missiles that specifically target aircraft 
		carriers to stop them from approaching our territorial waters if there 
		were conflict."
 
 A person with ties to the Chinese leadership who once served in the 
		military had a similar message: "If U.S. aircraft carriers come too 
		close to our coastlines in a conflict, our missiles can destroy them."
 
		
		 
		
 Xi Jinping, who has seized direct control of the world's largest 
		fighting force, has played a pivotal role in the ascendancy of Chinese 
		missile forces. This series, "The China Challenge," examines how Xi is 
		transforming the PLA and challenging U.S. supremacy in Asia. He has 
		delivered a powerful boost to the prestige and influence of the elite 
		unit responsible for China's nuclear and conventional missiles, the PLA 
		Rocket Force.
 
 The Chinese leader has described the missile forces as a "core of 
		strategic deterrence, a strategic buttress to the country's position as 
		a major power and a cornerstone on which to build national security." Xi 
		has brought senior missile force veterans into his closest circle of 
		military aides as he has consolidated his grip on the PLA with a 
		sweeping purge of senior officers accused of corruption or disloyalty.
 
 The Rocket Force has always enjoyed strong support from the ruling 
		Communist Party. But under Xi, the once secretive unit, formerly known 
		as the Second Artillery Corps, has been thrust into the limelight. Since 
		he took power in 2012 with a pledge to rejuvenate China as a great 
		power, the Rocket Force's latest nuclear and conventional missiles have 
		played a starring role at some of the biggest military parades held in 
		the Communist era.
 
 In one of these displays, in 2015, the designations of new missiles, 
		including the "carrier killer" DF-21D, were painted on the sides of the 
		projectiles in big white letters. The bold labels were aimed directly at 
		foreign audiences, according to Western military analysts monitoring the 
		parade in Beijing. At a parade Xi presided over to mark the 90th 
		anniversary of the PLA in 2017, missiles were also prominently 
		displayed.
 
 SENDING A MESSAGE
 
 This elaborate, choreographed showcasing of the newest and most powerful 
		missiles has provided a backdrop for Xi as he burnishes his credentials 
		as China's supreme military leader. Coverage of test launches, new 
		warheads and technical breakthroughs dominate the state-controlled 
		military media.
 
 But it's not mere theater. This concerted advertising of China's ability 
		to deliver long-range conventional strikes without risking aircraft, 
		ships or casualties is a key element of PLA strategy under Xi. Foreign 
		military analysts say it sends a signal that China has the capacity to 
		resist interference as it expands control over vast swathes of the South 
		China Sea, intensifies naval and air sorties around Taiwan, and extends 
		operations into territory it disputes with Japan in the East China Sea.
 
		 
		
 To be sure, while China's missile fleet has indisputably grown more 
		formidable, the reliability, accuracy and payloads of its weapons have 
		yet to be tested in battle. China hasn't fought a war since invading 
		Vietnam in 1979. The U.S. arsenal of air and sea-launched missiles, by 
		contrast, has been tried and proven repeatedly in wars over the past two 
		decades.
 
 It is also unknown if the PLA missile systems could survive electronic, 
		cyber and physical attacks on launch facilities, guidance systems and 
		command-and-control centers. Military analysts point out that there is 
		still some doubt about whether China has mastered the know-how that 
		would allow a "carrier killer" ballistic missile to detect, track and 
		hit a moving target far from the Chinese coast.
 
 U.S. military commanders and PLA watchers also acknowledge that there 
		could be elements of subterfuge involved in the publicity about Chinese 
		missiles. Deception is traditionally a key element of Chinese military 
		strategy. The PLA is well aware that America and other potential rivals 
		would be closely monitoring their test sites, according to satellite 
		imagery specialists.
 
 Some retired PLA officers who spoke to Reuters played down the 
		capability of China's missiles.
 
 "U.S. missiles are superior to ours in terms of quality and quantity," 
		the former PLA colonel told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity 
		to discuss a sensitive topic with the foreign media. "If we were truly 
		more advanced than the United States," said a Chinese military analyst, 
		"we would have liberated Taiwan."
 
 Still, current and former U.S. military officials say they are convinced 
		from close monitoring of China's numerous test firings that PLA missiles 
		are a genuine threat.
 
 THE RANGE WAR
 
 What makes Chinese missiles so dangerous for the United States and its 
		Asian allies is that the PLA is winning the "range war," according to 
		Robert Haddick, a former U.S. Marine Corps officer and now a visiting 
		senior fellow at the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies based in 
		Arlington, Virginia. While the United States was taking what Haddick 
		describes as a "long holiday" from missile development in the aftermath 
		of the Cold War, China was shooting for distance, developing missiles 
		that can fly further than those in the armories of the United States and 
		its Asian allies.
 
 The Pentagon has begun to publicly acknowledge that in missiles, at 
		least, China has the upper hand. "We are at a disadvantage with regard 
		to China today in the sense that China has ground-based ballistic 
		missiles that threaten our basing in the Western Pacific and our ships," 
		the former commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific, Admiral Harry 
		Harris, said in testimony before the U.S. Senate Armed Services 
		Committee in March last year.
 
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			Military vehicles carrying DF-26 ballistic missiles travel past 
			Tiananmen Gate during a military parade to commemorate the 70th 
			anniversary of the end of World War II in Beijing Thursday Sept. 3, 
			2015. Andy Wong/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo 
            
 
            At the time, Harris explained that the United States was unable to 
			counter with similar missiles because of the 1987 INF Treaty with 
			Russia, which banned these weapons. 
            The treaty constraints have left the United States with no 
			equivalent to weapons like China's DF-26 ballistic missile, which 
			has a range of up to 4,000 km and can strike at the key U.S. base at 
			Guam. China says the missile has a carrier-killer variant that can 
			hit a moving target at sea. U.S. bases in South Korea and Japan are 
			within range of another PLA projectile, the CJ-10 land attack cruise 
			missile, which has a range of about 1,500 km, according to Pentagon 
			estimates.
 However, the Trump administration appears to be clearing the way for 
			the United States to compete. On Feb. 1, Trump announced Washington 
			would withdraw from the treaty, accusing Moscow of breaching the 
			agreement. He said in a statement that the U.S. would quit in six 
			months unless Russia returned to compliance. Trump also said that 
			China had more than 1,000 missiles of the range covered by the INF 
			Treaty. He added that the U.S. would now develop a ground-launched 
			conventional missile that would have been banned under the treaty. 
			This could help offset China's advantage, military experts say, but 
			it will take time, probably years, for the U.S. to develop and 
			deploy these weapons.
 
 China criticized Trump's announcement, with Foreign Ministry 
			spokesman Geng Shuang saying the treaty was important in 
			"safeguarding global strategic balance and stability." Geng, 
			however, didn't mention the PLA's own arsenal of these weapons or 
			that China itself isn't party to the pact. He said China opposed 
			negotiating a new treaty that would cover other nations as well as 
			Russia and America.
 
 This missile gap portends a military upheaval. Some powerful PLA 
			anti-ship missiles now far outrange the strike aircraft deployed on 
			U.S. carriers. That means American military planners are grappling 
			with a scenario that until recently didn't exist: U.S. carriers 
			could be obsolete in a conflict near the Chinese mainland. If forced 
			to operate outside the range of their aircraft when approaching 
			China, the nuclear-powered leviathans would be far less effective. 
			Sail too close and they would be vulnerable.
 
            
			 
            
 Since the end of the Cold War, the U.S. Navy has been able to use 
			its carriers to bludgeon weaker enemies, approaching close enough to 
			launch air strikes, confident that the giant warships are 
			untouchable. Today, in the event of conflict with China in East 
			Asia, Pentagon planners and other regional militaries say they are 
			wrestling with how to respond to something they haven't seen since 
			World War Two: a return to highly contested warfare at sea.
 
 For the U.S. military, one fear is that swarms of cheap, expendable 
			Chinese missiles have the potential to neutralize the most expensive 
			warships ever built. China does not publish the cost of its 
			missiles. A modern version of the subsonic, Cold-war vintage 
			Harpoon, the mainstay anti-ship missile of the United States and its 
			allies, costs $1.2 million, according to the U.S. Navy. Western 
			military officials assume China's lower manufacturing costs would 
			mean it could build similar missiles for less. The latest U.S. 
			carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, cost about $13 billion to build – 
			about 10,000 times the price of the Harpoon.
 
 A HESITANT U.S.
 
 For more than half a century since China's ruling Communist Party 
			took power in 1949, a vast but technologically backward PLA was 
			largely confined to the Asian mainland and coastal waters. A small 
			force of nuclear warheads aimed at deterring a first strike 
			comprised the only serious long-range weapons in the PLA arsenal. 
			For most of that period, the United States and other foreign navies 
			exercised, patrolled, snooped and routinely sailed in the waters off 
			the Chinese coast, much as they did throughout the colonial period 
			when China was powerless to stop foreign encroachment on its 
			territory.
 
 The threat from China's new missiles, along with rapidly increasing 
			numbers of PLA navy submarines, means warships from the United 
			States and other foreign navies now patrol hesitantly and 
			infrequently in some key waterways close to the Chinese mainland and 
			Taiwan, according to serving American officials and veterans of U.S. 
			navy operations in Asia.
 
 China's rulers have never made public the number of missiles the PLA 
			possesses. But the Communist Youth League, the youth arm of the 
			Communist Party, disclosed some figures on its official Twitter-like 
			Weibo account in October 2016. China's Rocket Force boasts 100,000 
			men and possesses about 200 intercontinental ballistic missiles, 
			about 300 medium-range ballistic missiles, 1,150 short-range 
			ballistic missiles and 3,000 cruise missiles, the Youth League said.
 
            
			 
            
 According to U.S. and other Western estimates, China has about 2,000 
			conventional missiles that would fall within the terms of the INF 
			missile treaty - enough to launch saturation attacks on air bases, 
			ports or critical infrastructure in Japan, South Korea or Taiwan.
 
 Apart from weapons covered by the INF Treaty where China has a 
			monopoly, the PLA has other missiles in its arsenal that outperform 
			their U.S. counterparts. These include two supersonic anti-ship 
			cruise missiles, the YJ-12, with a range of 400 km, and the YJ-18, 
			which can hit targets up to 540 km away.
 
 To counter these missiles, the United States relies on its subsonic, 
			Harpoon anti-ship missile which has been modified to give it a 
			maximum range of about 240 km. "That is a very big gap," said 
			Haddick, who is also an adviser to the U.S. Special Operations 
			Command. "China's anti-ship missile capability exceeds those of the 
			United States in terms of range, speed and sensor performance."
 
 As part of a sweeping reorganization of the Chinese armed forces, Xi 
			in late 2015 elevated the missile force to the level of a service 
			alongside the army, navy and air force. In a ceremony widely covered 
			in the state-controlled media, the Second Artillery Corps was 
			renamed the PLA Rocket Force. Two veterans of this force, General 
			Wei Fenghe and General Zhang Shengmin, now sit on the Communist 
			Party's Central Military Commission, the supreme military control 
			body that is chaired by Xi.
 
 Another Rocket Force veteran, General Gao Jin, is seen as a rising 
			star of the Chinese military. When the missile force was rebadged, 
			Gao was appointed to head a new branch of the PLA, the Strategic 
			Support Force, which is responsible for cyber, electronic and space 
			warfare. Gao has been a key figure in the transition of the Rocket 
			Force from its origins as primarily a nuclear deterrent to its 
			current dual role of both nuclear shield and spearhead of the PLA's 
			conventional strike capability, according to U.S. and Chinese 
			military analysts.
 
 PEARL HARBOR-STYLE ATTACK
 
 For the United States and its regional allies, a top priority is to 
			wrest back the lead in the range war.
 
 
             
			Extra performance is being squeezed out of old U.S. air and 
			sea-launched missiles. Boeing is upgrading the Harpoon anti-ship 
			missile. An anti-ship variant of Raytheon's venerable Tomahawk land 
			attack cruise missile - with a range in excess of 1,600 km - is 
			undergoing tests.
 
 The U.S. Navy is working to add range to carrier strike aircraft, 
			and new weapons are in the pipeline. Lockheed Martin said in 
			December that it had delivered the first of its new, long-range 
			anti-ship missiles to the U.S. Air Force after a series of 
			successful tests. This stealthy missile could also be deployed on 
			warships.
 
 Meanwhile, China continues to improve its firepower. Two sets of 
			satellite images on Google Earth, taken three years apart, show how 
			China's Rocket Force is testing its growing arsenal.
 
 In one, the distinctive shape of a jet fighter is clearly visible on 
			what appears to be a mock airstrip in a remote Chinese desert. The 
			images, captured in mid-2013 over the far west of China, show the 
			outline of a delta-wing aircraft at the southern end of the runway. 
			Images taken in late 2016 tell a different story. The wings and tail 
			section are strewn at odd angles in a pile of wreckage.
 
 "That plane looks like it has been shot at," said Sean O'Connor, a 
			former U.S. Air Force intelligence analyst who now works as a 
			principal research analyst at Jane's, the defense information 
			company.
 
 The replica runway, pockmarked at one end with impact craters, is 
			part of what O'Connor and other satellite imagery analysts have 
			identified as a PLA missile test range. Here and at other remote 
			sites in western China, the PLA has been blasting missiles at what 
			appear to be simulated targets of air bases, fuel depots, ports, 
			ships, communication hubs, radar arrays and buildings.
 
 Some of the mock-ups appear to mimic targets in Japan and Taiwan. 
			Satellite images of the test range with the mock airstrip also 
			suggest China is rehearsing strikes on the key U.S. Navy base at 
			Yokosuka in Japan and other important facilities, according to a 
			2017 report from two U.S. Navy officers, Commander Thomas Shugart 
			and Commander Javier Gonzalez.
 
 The two officers identified a mock target that appeared to be a 
			mirror image of the inner harbor at Yokosuka base, home port for the 
			U.S. carrier USS Ronald Reagan and its battle group. In their report 
			for the Center for a New American Security, a Washington-based 
			research group, the two officers said the target had outlines of 
			angled piers similar to those at Yokosuka and the shapes of three 
			warships about the same size as the U.S. destroyers based at the 
			port.
 
 The scenario Shugart and Gonzalez laid out evokes the darkest moment 
			in American naval history. The mock-up, they wrote, could be 
			interpreted as a rehearsal of a Pearl Harbor-style surprise attack. 
			That paralyzing blow sank or damaged key elements of the American 
			fleet, killed more than 2,300 Americans and plunged the United 
			States into World War Two. But the Japanese failed to sink the 
			American aircraft carriers normally based at Pearl Harbor because 
			they were at sea.
 
            
			 
            
 In the animation at the recent Chinese airshow in Zhuhai, the "red 
			force" doesn't make the same mistake. After red force missiles 
			strike the blue force carrier, the animation concludes with the 
			words: "The defensive counter-attack operation has gotten the 
			expected results."
 
 (Reporting by David Lague in Zhuhai, China, and Benjamin Kang Lim. 
			Edited by Peter Hirschberg)
 
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