South China Morning Post

Missile launchers plan ‘a warning’ to Beijing from US

First Asia-Pacific deployment in decades seen as message to China against military advancemen­t

- Seong Hyeon Choi vincent.shchoi@scmp.com

Washington’s deployment of ground-based launchers for its medium-range missiles in the Asia-Pacific region for the first time in nearly four decades is a “warning” to Beijing against military advancemen­t and a conflict across the Taiwan Strait, according to analysts.

During a visit to South Korea on Saturday, General Charles Flynn, the US Army Pacific commander, said the army would soon deploy a new missile launch system for its latest “long-range precision fires”, such as the Standard Missile 6 (SM-6) intercepto­r and the maritime-strike Tomahawk, in the Asia-Pacific.

“That system will be deploying into the region soon. Where and when it’s going to go, I’m not going to talk about that now,” Yonhap News quoted Flynn as saying at Camp Humphreys, a US Forces Korea base in Pyeongtaek, near Seoul.

In response, the China’s foreign ministry said Beijing had always been “firmly opposed” to US deployment of medium-range missiles in the Asia-Pacific and strengthen­ing forward deployment at “China’s doorstep to seek unilateral military superiorit­y”.

“China adheres to the path of peaceful developmen­t and firmly pursues a defensive national defence policy. We have no interest in competing with any country in military power,” ministry spokeswoma­n Mao Ning said on Monday.

“We urge the United States to earnestly respect the security concerns of other countries and stop underminin­g regional peace and stability.”

The SM-6 is the US Navy’s latest intercept missile designed for extended-range anti-air warfare against ballistic missiles, with an operationa­l range of more than 240km and an active radar homing guidance system that allows the projectile to find and track its target autonomous­ly.

The Tomahawk is a subsonic cruise missile capable of striking a target about 2,500km from a warship or in a submarine-based land-attack operation.

Flynn’s comments are the first confirmati­on by a US Army general that a ground-based launch system capable of firing SM-6 and Tomahawks could be deployed in the Asia-Pacific this year.

“If the US Army’s deployment of SM-6 and Tomahawk missiles is implemente­d, it will definitely be a message for China,” said Yang Uk, a research fellow at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul.

“As the US naval power has fallen short of China’s, the US version of the counter A2/AD [anti-access/area denial] strategy, which deploys cruise and antiship missiles on land, has emerged as a way for the US Army to carry out multi-domain operations.

“Indeed, deploying a weapon system that puts the other party within its range is both a military threat and a warning to the adversary.”

Although mainly used by the navy, the missiles can also be fired from the US Army’s mid-range capability system, also known as Typhon.

Land-based missiles using launchers are considered more likely to avoid detection and enemy strikes than other platforms.

John Bradford, executive director of the Yokosuka Council on Asia-Pacific Studies, said such mobile launchers could be very useful.

“If deployed to friendly islands, they could both defend those islands from aerial attack and strike surface ships that get close,” Bradford said. “Being mobile and relatively small, enemies may have trouble locating and striking them.

“Were [Beijing] to invade Taiwan, launchers like these could help defend the island directly … the missiles could help contest China’s opportunit­y to easily cross the air and sea spaces around Taiwan.”

The deployment of such weapon systems in the Asia-Pacific region would be the first in 37 years. The US-Soviet Union Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty reached in 1987 prohibited developing and possessing land-based missiles with a range between 500-5,500km.

Washington has been developing new intermedia­te-range missiles since it withdrew from the INF Treaty in 2019, citing Moscow’s alleged violations of the agreement and amid China’s increasing military advancemen­t in the region.

According to the Pentagon’s annual report on China’s military power published in October, the PLA Rocket Force is estimated to have 500 intermedia­te and 1,000 medium-range ballistic missiles with ranges between 1,000-5,500km.

 ?? Photo: US Army ?? The mid-range capability missile launch system, Typhon, has been deployed by the US Army in Guam since last year.
Photo: US Army The mid-range capability missile launch system, Typhon, has been deployed by the US Army in Guam since last year.

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