MND confirms Chinese
missile tests
EVIDENCE? Chinese state media have reported that
a fisherman in Shandong had accidentally retrieved wreckage from what may have
been a missile booster
By J. Michael Cole / Staff Reporter
The Ministry of National Defense confirmed yesterday that China had test-fired
Julang-2 (JL-2) submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBM) before the New
Year.
Chinese military bulletin boards recently lit up with reports that the People¡¦s
Liberation Army (PLA) Navy might have test fired as many as six JL-2 SLBMs near
Dalian in Liaoning Province, China.
At least two Type 094, or Jin-class, submarines in China¡¦s Northern Fleet are
known to operate out of Xiaopingdao Submarine Base close to Dalian.
China plans to introduce up to five Type 094 second-generation nuclear-powered
ballistic missile submarine (SSBN) armed with JL-2 missiles. Each Type 094
submarine can carry as many as 12 missiles.
The JL-2, designed by China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp¡¦s 4th Academy,
is a solid-propellant derivative of the Dong Feng 31 (DF-31) intercontinental
ballistic missile (ICBM).
The JL-2, one of China¡¦s three long-range strategic missiles, has a maximum
range estimated at 8,000km and can carry a thermonuclear warhead with a yield
ranging from 25 kilotons to 1,000 kilotons, or about 80 times the force of the
nuclear device dropped on Hiroshima in 1945.
Contacted for comment yesterday, Ministry of National Defense spokesman Colonel
David Lo (ù²Ð©M) said the military was aware that China had tested the JL-2 and
would pay close attention to further development of the missile.
Lo¡¦s comments were the first official confirmation by Taiwan¡¦s military that the
PLA Navy had carried out the missile test, less than three weeks before
Taiwanese head for the polls on Saturday.
So far official Chinese media and the Chinese military have not confirmed rumors
of the exercise. Missile tests carried out by the PLA in March 1996 to pressure
Taiwanese as they headed into their first direct presidential election in the
nation¡¦s history are generally believed to have backfired on China and boosted
support for then-president Lee Teng-hui (§õµn½÷).
However, the state-owned Chinese-language Global Times reported yesterday that a
Chinese fisherman in Shandong Province had retrieved cylindrical wreckage from
what appeared to be a missile booster, which could provide confirmation of the
SLBM test.
Rick Fisher, a senior fellow at the International Assessment and Strategy Center
in Washington, told the Washington Times last week that the tests would clearly
demonstrate that after several years of development and delays, the PLA Navy is
now able to launch submarine-based ballistic missiles ¡§at a near wartime
frequency.¡¨
¡§If these reports are true, then the [Type] 094 submarine is ready for the PLA
version of deterrence patrols, which could commence this year,¡¨ he said.
¡§This number of successful tests would also indicate that the PLA has, at long
last, resolved whatever issues were preventing this missile from achieving
¡¥operational¡¦ status,¡¨ the paper quoted him as saying.
The US Department of Defense¡¦s annual report on the PLA stated that once it is
deployed, the Type 094/JL-2 combination would constitute China¡¦s first real
sea-based deterrent, a capability that could give Beijing the means to
discourage the US from intervening on behalf of Taiwan.
Additional reporting by Rich Chang
|