China flexes muscles with new missile
BEIJING: China confirmed on Thursday that it had put into a service a new missile that Chinese media has dubbed the “Guam killer” for its ability to hit the US Pacific Ocean base with a conventional or nuclear weapon.
China is in the midst of an ambitious modernisation programme for its armed forces, developing stealth fighters, aircraft carriers and advanced missiles as it strives to become a world class military by the middle of the century.
That, along with an increasingly assertive stance in the disputed South China Sea and around Taiwan, claimed by China as its sacred territory, has rattled nerves around the region and in Washington.
Speaking at a regular monthly news conference, defence ministry spokesman Wu Qian said that the military had begun putting into service the DF-26 intermediate range ballistic missile - called the “Guam killer” by media and defence experts.
Wu gave few details, aside from that it can carry conventional as well as nuclear warheads and attack targets on land or at sea with precision.
China has made little secret of the DF-26 programme. The missile appeared in a major military parade in Beijing in 2015.
In a separate announcement, China’s Air Force said that its aircraft had once again flown around Taiwan, the latest in a series of exercises Taiwan has described as military intimidation.