Did China put on a show of its Starry Sky-2 hypersonic vehicle just to impress the US?

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As Beijing wrestles with a trade war and rising tensions over Taiwan and the South China Sea, public announcement was probably intended as a rallying call, observers say

The China Academy of Aerospace Aerodynamics announced on Monday that its experimental “waverider” Starry Sky-2 had completed its first test flight and that it was a “huge success”.

With Washington and Beijing locked in a trade war, and tensions rising over Taiwan and the South China Sea, the announcement might well have been intended as a rallying call, according to an academic who specialises in security issues.

“The Chinese probably need a boost of morale and increase of strategic confidence as the relationship with the US is hitting a wall,” said Zhao Tong, a fellow with the nuclear policy programme at the Carnegie-Tsinghua Centre for Global Policy in Beijing.

“Russia also has been publicising their hypersonic missiles,” he said.

China’s defence ministry has been testing hypersonic glide vehicles (HGVs), capable of flying at more than five times the speed of sound (Mach 5) since 2014, but has never provided any details.

According to the US Department of Defence, the vehicles, which it refers to as WU-14, could be used to deliver missiles, both nuclear and non-nuclear, past any anti-missile defence system currently available.

Beijing has never officially confirmed or denied Washington’s claims.

China fires up advanced hypersonic missile challenge to US defences

But the public announcement of Starry Sky-2’s capabilities – it has a top speed of Mach 6, or 7,344km/h (4,563mph) – was probably made out of political and technological considerations, another observer said.

Song Zhongping, a Hong Kong-based military affairs commentator, agreed that the public announcement of Starry Sky-2’s test flight had been driven by the current political situation, but said it also indicated that China’s researchers had “reached the next step” in their development of the technology.

After being carried by a rocket to an altitude of 30km (18 miles), Starry Sky-2 and China’s other HGVs “glide” at high speed, like stones skipping through atmospheric layers. The waverider’s wedge shape gives it unique aerodynamic characteristics, which means it can ride on the shock waves generated by its own flight.

https://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy-defence/article/2158874/did-china-put-show-its-starry-sky-2-hypersonic-vehicle

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