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The HQ-19 is designed to intercept ballistic missiles, counter hypersonic glide vehicle, and engage satellites, largely comparable to the THAAD and SM-3 missile systems. The missile is guided by the Type 610A radar with 4,000 km (2,500 mi) of detection range, and the missile itself is capable of intercepting targets at 3,000 km (1,900 mi) away.
With VLS missiles finally in service with the PLAN, there has been high optimism to see a short-range VLS weapon that could replace the HQ-7. Contenders for the future short-range SAM of the PLAN include a vertical launched variant of the HQ-7, Russian TOR-M1, Russian SA-N-12 , VLS variant of the Chinese LY60N or HQ-61 , or a completely new design.
New Indonesian-made landing platform docks, current the Philippine Navy's foremost amphibious warfare platform and its first major brand new ship acquisition since the 1990s. It was acquired under the "Strategic Sealift Vessel" project and was based on the Indonesian Makassar-class landing platform dock. The ships can carry a Philippine Marine ...
China's foreign ministry on Thursday urged the Philippines to return to "peaceful development", saying Manila's decision to deploy a U.S. medium-range missile system in military exercises would ...
The HQ-22 was publicly revealed at the 2016 China International Aviation & Aerospace Exhibition. [1] The HQ-22 entered service with the People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) by 2019. [2] Serbia purchased the FK-3, the export variant, in 2019; they were delivered by PLAAF Xi'an Y-20 transport aircraft and entered service in April 2022. [3]
HQ-9 after the 70th anniversary of the end of WWII parade held in Beijing. Air defense. HQ-9; Changchun (150) equipped with HHQ-9. HHQ-9 — Naval surface-launched variant. [3] HQ-9A — Improved version, first tested in 1999 and service entry in 2001. [1] HQ-9B — Improved version with a range of up to 260 km and added passive infrared seeker ...
China claims almost the entire South China Sea, a conduit for more than $3 trillion of annual ship-borne commerce, including parts claimed by the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei.
The HN-1 is reportedly a Chinese development of the native X-600 missile. Some sources believe it was based on the Kh-SD. The biggest difference between the HN-1 and its rumored origin Kh-SD missile is that a turbofan engine was adapted for HN-1, replacing the turbojet engine of Kh-SD.