China Conducts Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile Test in Pacific;
Regional Tensions Rise
China’s firing of a submarine-launched missile
came as Australia secured more defense deals with Pacific
Island nations. Countries expressed concern about the test.
·
Missile
Test: China
test-fired a long-range, submarine-launched
ballistic missile (SLBM) carrying a dummy (mock) warhead into
the Pacific Ocean
on July 7, 2026.
·
Launch
Platform: The missile
was launched from a Chinese
nuclear-powered submarine.
·
Official
Statement: China
said the missile accurately
hit its designated target area and was not aimed at any specific country.
·
Regional
Notification: Neighboring governments received advance warning of the launch.
·
Regional
Concern: The test
triggered criticism from Australia,
New Zealand, and Japan, which described it as destabilizing and a cause
for serious concern.
·
Australia–Fiji
Pact: The launch
coincided with Australia and
Fiji announcing a mutual defense treaty and regional security
alliance, reflecting growing security cooperation in the Pacific.
·
Previous
Test: The launch
follows China's September 2024
test of a nuclear-capable ICBM
into the Pacific—the country's first known Pacific ICBM test in about 40 years.
·
U.S. Comparison: The report noted that the United States also routinely conducts ballistic
missile tests, including one from California to the Marshall Islands
in March 2026.
·
Expert
Assessment: Analysts
believe the missile was likely the JL-3,
China's latest submarine-launched nuclear-capable missile.
·
Strategic
Purpose: Experts
said the test demonstrates China's improving sea-based nuclear deterrent and may also be
intended to gauge regional
and U.S. reactions.
·
Military
Modernization: The test
reflects China's continuing efforts to strengthen its nuclear submarine fleet and
expand its strategic missile
capabilities.
·
Future
Outlook: Security
experts expect more frequent
Chinese missile tests as Beijing modernizes and validates its growing
nuclear arsenal.
[ABS News Service/07.07.2026]
China
test-fired a long-range ballistic missile with a dummy warhead in the Pacific Ocean
on Monday, the first such launch in almost two years, prompting alarmed countries
to criticize the move as destabilizing.
Governments
in the region were warned of the launch shortly beforehand. The overt display of
China’s fast-expanding military capabilities threatens to further fan a defense buildup around the Pacific in the midst of anxieties
about the strength of the U.S. commitment to the region.
The
missile was launched from a Chinese nuclear-powered submarine and sent a “mock warhead”
into the Pacific Ocean, according to a report from Xinhua, China’s official news
agency.
“The
missile landed accurately in the designated area,” the report said. The test launch
at 12:01 p.m. Beijing time, Xinhua said, was “not directed against any specific
country or target.”
It
was not immediately clear where the missile was fired from or landed. The launch
came as the leaders of Australia and Fiji announced a mutual defense treaty and a regional security alliance, the latest
in a string of agreements Canberra has been striking with Pacific Island nations
that are widely viewed as efforts to push back against China’s encroachment.
In
September 2024, China fired a nuclear-capable intercontinental ballistic missile
carrying a dummy warhead across the Pacific Ocean into waters near French Polynesia,
drawing condemnation from countries in the region. It was China’s first-known ICBM
test in the Pacific region in four decades.
The
United States routinely carries out test launches of ballistic missiles from land
or sea, including one fired from California at a target in the Marshall Islands
this March.
Winston
Peters, New Zealand’s foreign minister, said in a statement the country was “deeply
concerned” and that Monday’s test seemed to be part of “a recurring pattern by China.”
“New
Zealand considers this an unwelcome and concerning development. We, like our neighbors in other Pacific countries, have no interest in China
using the South Pacific as a testing site for missile capability,” he said.
Australia’s
foreign minister, Penny Wong, called the test “destabilizing to the region” and
said that it was “in the context of a rapid military buildup by China.”
The
Japanese government said in a statement on Monday that it had “conveyed its serious
concern regarding the intensification of China’s military activities.” Japan had
urged China to reconsider the launch after receiving the warning, the statement
said.
Last
year, a Chinese naval task force also carried out live fire drills in the Tasman
Sea between Australia and New Zealand, prompting dozens of civilian flights to change
course to avoid the area.
John
Blaxland, professor of international security at the Australian National University
and a former Australian military intelligence officer, said that Beijing was testing
not only its own capabilities, but the reactions from countries in the region as
well as the United States.
“What
China is doing, like they’re doing with Taiwan, is probing and testing and incrementally
acclimatizing intrusive, assertive, authoritarian behavior,”
he said.
In
its announcement on Monday, the Chinese government did not specify the type of missile
it tested.
Jeffrey
Lewis, a scholar at Middlebury College in Vermont who studies China’s nuclear weapons
modernization, said that he thought the Chinese military was most likely testing
the JL-3, a new generation ICBM that is designed to carry a nuclear warhead and
be launched from submarines.
China
displayed the JL-3 missile at a military parade in Beijing last year. A Pentagon
report in 2023 said that the missile was being deployed on China’s latest generation
of submarines, making them capable of striking the continental United States from
the Chinese coast.
The
region should expect more tests, Mr. Lewis said.
“It
suggests a new era of testing where every system will get its moment in the sun,”
he said, referring to China’s growing array of nuclear-capable missiles. He said
that more such tests would give China greater confidence in its nuclear deterrent.
“The
Chinese have historically tested their ICBMs less than other countries,” Mr. Lewis
said. “I think that was political and now those politics have changed and I think
they’re adopting an approach of testing more. They’re willing to pay the political
costs of that in a way that they weren’t in the past.”
China’s
submarine-based missiles have long been a weak spot in the country’s nuclear deterrent.
Its nuclear-powered submarines have been noisier than those of other powers, especially
the United States, making them easier to detect and potentially destroy. But the
People’s Liberation Army has been trying to narrow the gap by developing stealthier
submarines and new missiles.
The
2024 test most likely involved a DF-31 road-mobile missile that was launched from
Hainan, an island province in southern China, according to an analysis published
by the Federation of American Scientists.