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US Politics

China military reaches ‘war footing’ with new missile silos and advanced AI warfare systems

By Eric November 18, 2025

A recent congressional report highlights a significant shift in China’s military posture, declaring that the nation has reached a “war footing” marked by a substantial increase in its nuclear capabilities and advanced military technologies. The U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission’s annual report reveals that China has constructed approximately 350 new intercontinental missile silos and increased its nuclear warhead stockpile by 20% within just a year. This rapid expansion could undermine the United States’ long-standing deterrence advantage in the Indo-Pacific region. The report emphasizes that China’s military modernization, particularly its integration of artificial intelligence into warfare strategies, is transforming the People’s Liberation Army into a formidable force that could potentially confront the U.S. effectively, even without achieving parity in nuclear arsenals.

Among the alarming advancements noted in the report is China’s introduction of an AI-powered electronic warfare system capable of disrupting U.S. radar signals from significant distances, including regions as far away as Guam and Alaska. This system, which utilizes 6G technology, enables China to execute coordinated electronic attacks on U.S. and allied radar networks, marking a shift towards what Beijing terms “intelligentized warfare.” Furthermore, during a military parade in September, China showcased its full nuclear triad for the first time, demonstrating its capability to launch missiles from land, air, and sea. The commission warns that these developments, when combined with China’s political maneuvers and economic leverage, could enable Beijing to act swiftly in crises, thereby reducing the response time available to the U.S. and its allies.

The report also raises urgent concerns about the implications of a potential conflict over Taiwan, predicting that such a war could devastate global GDP by up to 10%, reminiscent of the 2008 financial crisis. Additionally, it underscores the risks of nuclear escalation in the region. With China currently possessing around 600 nuclear warheads and aiming for 1,000 by 2030, the urgency for the U.S. to reassess its military readiness is palpable. The commission has made 28 recommendations to Congress, including conducting a comprehensive audit of U.S. defense capabilities regarding Taiwan and reinforcing economic measures to reduce reliance on China for critical technologies. The report concludes with a stark warning: without a coordinated response, America’s deterrence posture may falter against China’s expanding military and economic might, heightening the stakes in the evolving geopolitical landscape.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GN6JS8UVtQ8

China’s military buildup has reached what a new congressional report calls a “war footing,” with hundreds of new missile silos and expanding nuclear capabilities that could erode America’s long-standing deterrence edge in the Indo-Pacific.
China has built roughly 350 new intercontinental missile silos and expanded its nuclear warhead stockpile by 20% in the past year, part of a sweeping military expansion that the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission says could strain U.S. readiness to counter Chinese aggression.
The commission’s 2025 annual report to Congress says Beijing’s rapid nuclear buildup, combined with new
artificial intelligence-driven warfare systems
, is transforming the People’s Liberation Army into a force “capable of fighting and winning a war against the United States” — even without matching U.S. nuclear numbers.
According to the report, China has unveiled an AI-powered electronic warfare system capable of detecting and suppressing U.S. radar signals as far as Guam, the Marshall Islands and Alaska, and is now deploying 6G-based platforms across its armed forces.
HIGH STAKES ON THE HIGH SEAS AS US, CHINA TEST LIMITS OF MILITARY POWER
The report says China unveiled a new 6G-based electronic warfare platform in mid-2025, capable of coordinating radar jamming and signal interception across long distances. The system reportedly uses high-speed data links and artificial intelligence to synchronize attacks on U.S. and allied radar networks — a preview of what Beijing calls “intelligentized warfare.”
 At a military parade in Beijing this September, China for the first time displayed a full nuclear triad — missiles launchable from land, air and sea.
The commission warns these advances, paired with
China’s political crackdown and economic leverage
, could allow Beijing to act “quickly and decisively in a crisis,” shortening the time the U.S. and its allies would have to respond to aggression.
CHINA’S ENERGY SIEGE OF TAIWAN COULD CRIPPLE US SUPPLY CHAINS, REPORT WARNS
The commission is urging Congress to require the Pentagon to conduct a full audit of U.S. readiness to
defend Taiwan
, warning that Washington may no longer meet its legal obligations under the Taiwan Relations Act. The report calls for a classified and unclassified assessment of whether U.S. forces could “resist any resort to force or coercion” by China — even in a scenario where the United States is also facing simultaneous aggression from Russia, Iran or North Korea.
A war over Taiwan, the commission cautions, could wipe out up to 10% of global GDP — a shock on par with the 2008 financial crisis — and carry a “cataclysmic” risk of nuclear escalation and wider conflict in the Indo-Pacific.
China now holds around 600 nuclear warheads. The Pentagon has assessed China is aiming to own 1,000 by 2030. 
The report further warns that China’s economic coercion is compounding the threat, pointing to Beijing’s dominance in foundational semiconductors, rare earth minerals, and printed circuit boards. It says these dependencies could leave the United States “reliant on its rival for the backbone of its modern economy and military.”
Among 28 recommendations, the commission calls for Congress to bar Chinese-made components from U.S. power grids, create a unified economic statecraft agency to enforce export controls, and reaffirm diplomatic backing for Taiwan — including its partnership with the Vatican, one of Taiwan’s few remaining formal allies that Beijing has sought to isolate through church diplomacy.
“China’s rapid military and economic mobilization shortens U.S. warning timelines,” the report concludes, warning that without a coordinated response, America’s deterrence posture “risks falling short” against Beijing’s expanding capabilities.

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