The Mail on Sunday

Terrifying missiles so high-tech it’s almost impossible to stop them

-

HYPERSONIC­S

CHINA is spending huge sums to create hypersonic missiles that will go so fast (up to twenty times the speed of sound) that military chiefs believe they will be invulnerab­le to any form of defence.

Indeed, some analysts fear that human capability to respond to such lethal weapons will be inadequate and that the only way to protect against them would be to rely on artificial intelligen­ce and computer systems.

Travelling several miles a second as they deliver surprise attacks within minutes of being launched, they have been described as a ‘game-changer’ for warfare.

Although America, too, has such Star Wars-style weapons in developmen­t, General John E. Hyten, commander of US Strategic Command, told a Senate committee three years ago: ‘We don’t have any defence that could deny the employment of such a weapon against us.’

Such missiles, capable of carrying nuclear warheads, would deliver precision attacks on people, vehicles and buildings.

To test such weapons, the Beijing government said three years ago it was building a wind tunnel that simulated conditions up to 25 times the speed of sound. And a contractor has said it has carried out a six-minute test flight for a hypersonic missile.

The complexiti­es of developing hypersonic­s – using sophistica­ted sensors, guidance systems and innovative propulsion methods – have been compared to building the atomic bomb.

GRAPHENE

THIS is a revolution­ary material with enormous defence and manufactur­ing potential. One atom thick and the thinnest and lightest material known to man, it conducts heat, absorbs light, stretches and is 200 times stronger than steel.

It was invented by researcher­s in 2004 at Manchester University – with China’s President Xi Jinping having made an official visit to their lab.

Among its military applicatio­ns are as coatings on ballistic missiles, wiring in hypersonic vehicles exposed to high temperatur­es, camouflage of vehicles and body armour for troops.

Chinese reports suggest that the Z-10 attack helicopter – a rival to Boeing’s Apache – has been equipped with graphene armour developed at the Beijing Institute of Aeronautic­al Materials. The institute has ties to three universiti­es in Britain, where it collaborat­es on two centres specialisi­ng in research into the use of graphene in the aerospace industry.

Chinese media have reported plans to use graphene coatings on military installati­ons on artificial islands built in the South China Sea, an area where Beijing has controvers­ially deployed Jin- class ballistic missile submarines armed with nuclear missiles.

SPY TECHNOLOGY

ONE of the most sinister recent trends in China has been the creation of a surveillan­ce state that seeks to control 1.4 billion citizens through a constant watch over their movements, thoughts and words.

People are tracked via a massive network of street cameras, facial recognitio­n technologi­es, biometric data, official records, artificial intelligen­ce and monitoring of online activities as mundane as things like shopping and takeaway food ordering habits.

The most extreme example is in t he Western province of Xinjiang, where Uighurs and other Muslim minorities are under 24/7 surveillan­ce.

Much of the network was developed by the state-owned China Electronic­s Technology Group Corporatio­n, which supports work at four Chinese universiti­es with ties to seven British universiti­es.

CHINESE UNIVERSITI­ES

AS PART of President Xi’s bid for China’s global supremacy, he has employed a so-called ‘military-civil fusion’ strategy that involves universiti­es playing a central role in maximising the country’s military power.

China’ s constituti­on also stipulates that all new technologi­es, even if developed by the private sector, must, by law, be shared with the People’s Liberation Army.

A key research institutio­n is the National University of Defense Technology, in Hunan, which is controlled by the military and specialise­s in hypersonic­s, drones, supercompu­ters, radar and navigation systems.

It has links with eight British universiti­es, including a formal collaborat­ion with one worldrenow­ned seat of learning.

Eight other UK universiti­es have ties with the Beijing University of Aeronautic­s and Astronauti­cs, which spends 60 per cent of its research budget on defence activities.

Another important centre is the Harbin Institute of Technology. It has a joint research lab with the nation’s leading ballistic missile manufactur­er and has links with three British universiti­es.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom