The Chinese regime isn’t satisfied with controlling just South China Sea. Now it wants to put its navy, including nuclear submarines, in the Indian Ocean, too. What could go wrong?
A recently-produced Chinese missile capable of targeting the United States may be getting an upgrade—improved accuracy, different payloads, and a new, off-road mobile launch platform that would make the threat harder to neutralize. According to experts, the changes represent a further hardening of China’s nuclear capabilities, and another potential threat from China for the United States to monitor.
The Chinese regime isn’t satisfied with controlling just South China Sea. Now it wants to put its navy, including nuclear submarines, in the Indian Ocean, too. What could go wrong?
A recently-produced Chinese missile capable of targeting the United States may be getting an upgrade—improved accuracy, different payloads, and a new, off-road mobile launch platform that would make the threat harder to neutralize. According to experts, the changes represent a further hardening of China’s nuclear capabilities, and another potential threat from China for the United States to monitor.