What China’s Missile Intercept Test Means
China
recently carried out its second missile intercept test, which U.S.
observers may be tempted to interpret as a sign that Beijing is planning
to build its own national missile defense system. But before jumping to
conclusions, the nature, purpose, and consequences of that test need to
be carefully analyzed.
A January 28 news report from Xinhua News Agency said that “China again carried out a land-based mid-course missile interception test within its territory Sunday.” But the Chinese version
of the same statement includes an extra, important word: “China carried
out a land-based mid-course missile interception technology test. As a result of the omission, the test may be misunderstood as involving a system meant for deployment.
It is true that China’s economic
capacity has been growing very quickly in recent years, allowing Beijing
to do much more than it could before in developing its military
strength. Still, there is ample reason to doubt that Beijing has made a
decision to develop a national missile defense system.
The crucial use of the word technology means that China was trying
to assess capabilities. In this case, Beijing was likely trying to
better understand current U.S. capabilities and how its own compare.
Testing a Technology Rather Than a System
China’s first missile intercept test took place on January 11,
2010, and the English version of the statement marking that effort was
an accurate translation of the Chinese: “China conducted a test
on ground-based mid-course missile interception technology within its
territory on Monday” (emphasis added). China’s two tests thus far have
focused on developing and understanding missile intercept technology
rather than assessing performance of a deployable missile defense
system.
The core technology the United States uses in its missile defense
is a kinetic energy technology called “hit to kill” that aims to launch
interceptors to collide with incoming missiles. China apparently used
this kind of technology in both of its missile intercept tests to date.
In an intercept test of hit-to-kill technology, the chance of
success depends primarily on how the interceptor performs as it homes in
on missiles. In a real battle environment, a number of additional
factors contribute to the success or failure of the intercept, including
the ability of the interceptor to identify the right targets.
It appears the 2010 test scenario was far from a real battle. According to a U.S. government document passed to the Telegraph by WikiLeaks,
in the 2010 Chinese test, the interceptor and the target missile were
launched nearly simultaneously. In battle, the interceptors would be
launched after the missile, once the trajectory of the incoming missile
had been detected.
The 2010 test was probably an effort to understand the homing
performance of the interceptor. And if the progression of U.S. missile
tests can be used as a benchmark, the technology involved in the recent
Chinese test should not have been significantly different from the
previous one.
It will be left to the Chinese political leadership to decide
whether or not to apply this technology to specific systems in the
future. Serious strategic studies are needed before such a decision can
be made.
The Threat Perceptions Behind the Tests
Security experts in Western countries may wonder who the assumed
enemy was in the two missile intercept tests. According to the
Information Bureau of China’s Defense Ministry,
“the test is defensive in nature and targets no other country.” To
understand the language in this statement, one must have intimate
knowledge of China’s special security concepts that have developed over
the last two centuries. Even though Beijing has consistently developed
new technologies, its efforts have been more about its desire to avoid
falling behind other powers than about a specific threat.
Unlike the United States, which usually identifies certain hostile
countries (such as the Soviet Union during the Cold War or Iran today)
or groups (such as al-Qaeda) as its national security threats, China
conceptualizes such threats in terms of particular situations. Rather
than a particular actor, China’s National Defense White Paper in
2008 identified “the superiority of the developed countries in economy,
science and technology, as well as military affairs” as a security
challenge and threat. The philosophy behind the statement is that China
would be beaten if it did not keep up with other countries in economic,
scientific, technological, and military affairs.
China’s concern about “falling behind” comes from its historical
experience of being invaded by Western powers armed with modern
firepower beginning with the First Opium War, fought between China and
the UK from 1839 to 1842. The technical and military superiority of the
Western powers made China vulnerable.
Moreover, China would not have benefited from identifying specific
countries as its main security threats since it was often hard to tell
which states were allies and which enemies. For example, France and the
UK competed in Europe but were allies when they fought against China in
the Second Opium War (1856–1860).
And if China tried to brand all countries that offended its
sovereignty as security threats, it would face too many strong enemies.
The alliance that invaded China during the Boxer Rebellion in 1900, for
instance, included eight different nations.
The lesson China has learned from these experiences is that it must
catch up to the Western powers in military technology or it could be
defeated by any combination of unexpected invaders. For China, it is
much easier to recognize the security challenge in falling behind than
to identify specific hostile countries as security threats.
In the past one hundred and fifty years, the Chinese government,
even through the changes it has undergone as a result of revolution, has
always wanted to narrow the gap between its military technologies and
those of the developed powers.
In 1983, the United States began its missile defense efforts under
the banner of the Strategic Defense Initiative. China, meanwhile, was
recovering from the chaos caused by Mao’s Cultural Revolution and
implementing its new policy of opening to the Western world. Chinese
scientists considered the American initiative to be a promotion of
scientific development in the United States. They worried that the
technical gap between China and the developed countries would grow if
Beijing did not make similar efforts.
Encouraged by these scientists, China launched Project 863
in March 1986 to promote scientific research, including work to
understand U.S. missile defense. This program is considered a “technical
reserve” that allows China to achieve the same level of scientific and
technical development as advanced countries.
At that time, it was not China’s purpose to build a Chinese missile
defense system to counter the U.S. ballistic missile threat. The United
States was viewed as a friend rather than an enemy by China.
Furthermore, it made very little sense for China to build a missile
defense system to counter a large U.S. offensive nuclear force. Instead,
the purpose was to understand the development of new military science
and avoid being surprised by Western scientific advances.
China’s choice of technology should also be considered in light of
its aversion to falling behind. Over the years, U.S. missile defense
development has demonstrated that directed energy technology for missile
defense—the so-called “Star Wars” plan that involves laser and particle
beams—is far from ready while hit-to-kill technology is becoming
workable. Chinese scientists have been aware of this trajectory since
the launch of the Strategic Defense Initiative and therefore developed
China’s own hit-to-kill technology. China’s 2010 and 2013 missile
intercept tests demonstrated that the country had acquired this
technology, but that does not mean China has a conceptual missile
defense system that can target incoming missiles from any specific
country.
Knowledge of Missile Defense and Strategic Stability
The United States would find it politically and technically
difficult to assure China that a U.S. missile defense system would not
undermine China’s nuclear deterrent capability. But China’s two missile
intercept tests have provided Chinese scientists firsthand knowledge
about core missile defense technology. This knowledge can be used in
assessing the degree of strategic stability between the United States
and China in addition to serving as a reserve that helps Beijing avoid
being surprised by Western scientific developments in the future.
For a long time, Washington and Beijing have disagreed about the
nature of U.S. missile defense. China worries that U.S. missile defense
will undermine its deterrent capability and therefore erode U.S.-Chinese
strategic stability. The United States emphasizes that it does not
intend to weaken China’s deterrent capability but does not explain what
limitations in the capabilities of its missile defenses prevent it from
doing so. Nor has any recent U.S. administration or Congress indicated
an interest in accepting treaty limits on potential deployments of
national missile defense systems, a step that would reassure Beijing.
And some proponents of national missile defense in the United States have argued that Washington should seek missile defense capabilities that could negate or significantly blunt Beijing’s retaliatory nuclear capabilities.
And some proponents of national missile defense in the United States have argued that Washington should seek missile defense capabilities that could negate or significantly blunt Beijing’s retaliatory nuclear capabilities.
If the United States chooses mid-course missile interceptors as a
major component of its missile defense system, it will be difficult to
reassure China. Beijing may believe that Washington is attempting to
undermine its capability even if U.S. politicians allow for assurances
to China about limitations in U.S. missile defense capability.
A numeric limitation of interceptors by the United States cannot
fundamentally reassure China. Missile defense capability is measured by
the number of interceptors (also called the thickness of the defense),
the range of an interceptor (referred to here as macroperformance), and
issues related to precision (microperformance). As China has a small
nuclear force, it may still consider a small number of interceptors (a
“thin” U.S. missile defense system) to be a threat.
A treaty limitation could afford Beijing some confidence that it
would have time to react to planned U.S. deployments of a defense thick
enough to impede China’s nuclear retaliatory capabilities. But it is
unlikely that Washington would agree to such a limit in the first place.
While reassuring Beijing, it would also constrain the U.S. ability to
further develop its technology.
Even if the United States decided to provide some reassurance to
China, it would be difficult to do so. The macroperformance of a
mid-course missile defense system depends mainly on the range an
interceptor can reach to engage an incoming missile. The range depends
on the time required and available for an early-warning system to detect
the incoming missile, the detection range of the fire-control radar
(which is designed to provide information to the interceptor so it hits
its target), and the speeds of the interceptor and incoming missile.
This is the most transparent part of a missile defense system.
The United States may be able to inform China about the
macroperformance of its missile defense system. However, information
about the macroperformance of the U.S. system, which is designed to
intercept North Korean intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs),
would not be useful in reassuring China. The trajectory of a
hypothetical North Korean ICBM heading to North America is very close to
that of a Chinese ICBM. As a result, the macroperformance needed by a
U.S. missile defense system targeting a hypothetical North Korean ICBM
would be similar to one targeting a Chinese ICBM.
The microperformance of a missile defense system includes its
detection and discrimination capabilities, the statistical odds that
engagement between an interceptor and a missile will result in a kill
(the kill probability), the capability to counter multiple targets, and
so on. The United States could reassure Russia and China by informing
them about limitations in the microperformance of the U.S. missile
defense system.
But the United States may not want to do so for both technical and
political reasons. Technically, the details of microperformance may be
useful in helping competitors develop and deploy countermeasures.
Politically, U.S. missile defense designers would not be happy to
publicly acknowledge technical weaknesses of their system.
So Chinese scientists must provide their own assessments of U.S.
missile defense capability to their political leaders. Their assessments
about the number of interceptors and the macroperformance of the U.S.
missile defense system may not differ significantly from those made by
their American counterparts. However, before the two missile intercept
tests, Chinese assessments of the microperformance of the U.S. missile
defense system must have been based on worst-case assumptions. The
knowledge Chinese scientists gained from the two tests enables them to
more realistically assess U.S. missile defense capability.
The knowledge gained could also help relieve some of the Chinese
concerns about the strategic capability of U.S. missile defense systems.
The Chinese scientists who worked on the hit-to-kill technology for the
two tests should be invited to join discussions on strategic stability.
They could make significant contributions by sharing their assessments
of the real capability of U.S. missile defenses and their impact on
strategic stability between United States and China.
Next Steps
If China eventually decides to develop its hit-to-kill knowledge
into a missile defense system, it will be a choice made by political
leaders and should be informed by serious strategic studies.
China has three potential options going forward: First, it can delay further action and simply treat its missile defense technology as a technical reserve to draw on at some point in the future. Second, Beijing can develop a Chinese version of a national missile defense system. Third, China can opt to develop a point defense system to protect command and control centers and some strategic weapons.
China has three potential options going forward: First, it can delay further action and simply treat its missile defense technology as a technical reserve to draw on at some point in the future. Second, Beijing can develop a Chinese version of a national missile defense system. Third, China can opt to develop a point defense system to protect command and control centers and some strategic weapons.
A national missile defense system is designed to defend the major
part of a country’s territory against ballistic missile attacks. As the
size of Chinese territory is about the same as that of the United
States, the framework of a conceptual Chinese national missile defense
system should be similar to that of the U.S. system (now referred to as
the Homeland Defense System). But building an effective national missile
defense system would be much more difficult for China than it was for
the United States, regardless of whether it is designed to counter U.S.
or regional missile attacks.
In the U.S.-Chinese context, it would be very inefficient for China
to deploy a national missile defense system to counter U.S. offensive
nuclear forces. If the Chinese want to use a national missile defense
system to limit the damage caused by U.S. strategic missiles, they will
need many more interceptors than the United States would need for the
same purpose. China would have to pay much more money than United States
to build up its capability. And such a missile defense system, if it
contained enough interceptors, would have broader costs as well—the same
negative impact as the U.S. national missile defense system currently
does on U.S.-Chinese strategic stability.
Another purpose of a Chinese national missile defense system would
be countering an attack of a few missiles. This is similar to the
argument the United States uses today to counter missile threats from
North Korea and Iran.
However, Beijing’s geopolitical situation is very different from
Washington’s. Since none of its immediate neighbors has deployed
ballistic missiles, the United States does not have to rely on its
national missile defense system to stop missiles launched near its
border. By contrast, quite a few of China’s immediate neighbors have
acquired or are developing ballistic missiles. Compared to the challenge
facing the U.S. Homeland Defense System, it would be much more
difficult for a conceptual Chinese national missile defense system to
defend against ballistic missiles launched near the Chinese border
because the early-warning time would be very short for China. A national
missile defense system does not seem to be a good choice in this
context either.
A point defense system is designed to defend a few small areas
against ballistic missile attacks. This is a much more reasonable choice
than a national missile defense system for China if it decides to
develop its hit-to-kill technology into a missile defense system. A
point defense system could be used to protect the Chinese command and
control center and to make sure that Chinese political and military
leaders would survive a surprise preemptive nuclear strike so that they
could direct a retaliatory nuclear strike. The system could also be used
to protect some of China’s strategic nuclear weapons and increase their
survivability.
In such a way, a point defense system would make China’s nuclear
deterrent more credible and ensure its strategic stability with other
nuclear-armed countries.
Such a system also may have significantly lower technical and
financial requirements than a national system. A point defense
interceptor does not have to be as fast as a national missile defense
interceptor, the fire-control radar does not have to be deployed as far
forward, and there are more early-warning choices for point defense than
for national missile defense.
Comprehensive strategic studies and debates are necessary before
China can make a choice about how to move forward. With two interceptor
technology tests now under its belt, China can begin to have these
discussions, but a decision is probably some years in the future.
Western analysts should therefore not confuse the recent missile
intercept tests for a Chinese commitment to build a national missile
defense system.
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