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A powerhouse of range and accuracy

The DF-27 is a road-mobile, solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile, which gives it both deployment flexibility and survivability in the event of a first strike. With a range of 5,000 to 8,000 kilometers, it significantly outperforms previous systems. By comparison, the DF-21D has a range of only about 1,500 kilometers, while the DF-26 reaches about 4,000 kilometers. This exponential increase in range means that mobile DF-27 launchers can operate from the heart of mainland China while threatening targets throughout the Pacific, including U.S. naval bases in San Diego, Bremerton, or even Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. The mobility of these launchers, often concealed within underground road networks or mountainous terrain, makes their detection and neutralization extremely difficult.

The DF-27’s precision is another revolutionary aspect. Unlike traditional ballistic missiles designed to strike large, stationary targets, the DF-27 incorporates a sophisticated terminal guidance system capable of tracking and intercepting moving targets such as aircraft carriers at sea. This capability relies on an integrated network of surveillance satellites, over-the-horizon radars, and reconnaissance drones, forming a multi-layered “chain of destruction.” The Pentagon’s latest estimates suggest that China has significantly improved its real-time target designation capabilities, reducing the missile’s circular error probability (CEP) to just a few dozen meters—enough to ensure the near-certain destruction of a 100,000-metric-ton aircraft carrier with a single conventional warhead.

The Hypersonic and Nuclear Threat

One of the most concerning features of the DF-27 is its ability to carry hypersonic glide vehicles (HGVs). Once detached from the carrier missile during the terminal phase of their flight, these vehicles can perform unpredictable maneuvers at speeds exceeding Mach 5. For current missile defense systems such as the U.S. Aegis system, intercepting such targets poses a nearly insurmountable challenge. HGVs combine the speed of ballistic missiles with the maneuverability of fighter jets, creating a threat against which existing defenses are largely ineffective. This hypersonic capability means that a U.S. carrier strike group, even one protected by several destroyers equipped with the most modern systems, would remain extremely vulnerable.

Furthermore, the DF-27 can be configured with low- or medium-yield nuclear warheads. This conventional-nuclear duality significantly complicates strategic calculations and crisis management. In the event of a conflict over Taiwan, for example, China could threaten to use tactical nuclear strikes against U.S. naval forces, creating an extremely dangerous escalation scenario. The mere ambiguity surrounding the nature of the warheads loaded onto these missiles forces U.S. military planners to treat every launch as potentially nuclear, which severely limits response options and strengthens China’s deterrent power. This strategy of “escalation to de-escalate” represents a fundamental break with Cold War doctrine.

Every time I hear experts talk about these technologies, my blood runs cold. We are playing with fire—literally. The arms race has never been more dangerous, because this time it is taking place amid the public’s near-total indifference. While we scroll through our phones, while we get worked up over trivialities on social media, engineers in China and the United States are designing weapons capable of destroying our world in a matter of minutes. And the worst part is that we seem to have accepted this madness as the new normal.

Sources

Primary Sources

U.S. Department of Defense Annual Report on Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China, published on December 23, 2025.

Official map of China’s conventional capabilities published by the Pentagon, December 2025.

Statements by Dr. Andrew Erickson, professor of strategy at the Naval War College, USNI News, December 26, 2025.

Secondary sources

“Chinese Forces Fielding Intercontinental Anti-Ship Ballistic Missiles Capable of Reaching U.S. West Coast, Pentagon Says,” USNI News, Aaron-Matthew Lariosa, December 26, 2025.

“Map Shows Range of China’s Ship-Killer Missiles Targeting U.S. Territory,” Newsweek, Ryan Chan, December 24, 2025.

“Exclusive Analysis: Chinese Missiles Threaten U.S. Aircraft Carriers in the Next Era of Naval Warfare,” Army Recognition, April 14, 2025.

“China’s New Hypersonic Missile Plan to Make the U.S. Navy Obsolete at Mach 5,” 19FortyFive, December 2025.

This content was created with the help of AI.

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