Look! Even China has said NOTHING about this idea of a BM hitting a carrier. The only people touting this idea are internet warriors, which apparently includes you. There has been no proof of concept, no technology demonstrator, hell, the Chinese have not even put up a mock display of the thing.
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This is still all BS and what have you shown me that the TOPOL-M is going to be MIRVed? Do you even know what MIRV is and when it was developed? This has NOTHING to do with putting a cruise missile on top of a TOPOL-M. We know the TOPOL-M can carry 6 MIRV warheads but this still has got nothing to do with your suggestion that they can hit a moving target.
None. Nadda. Zero. Zilch. Just pure speculation on your part.
Multiple reentry vehicle, yep I know what that is, the point is that the source that was shown and you commented on the Topol they said they never tested any thing new. The russians have been testing different payloads on the missile, the MIRVing of the Topol is not even a speculation or a new thing it has been discussed in the past.
"
2002 Oct. 12: Russian armed forces had a busy weekend on Saturday, October 12, 2002, conducting the most extensive missile launching exercise in years. According to the Russian media, the nation's submarines stationed in the Sea of Okhotsk and the Barents Sea fired long-range missiles at the targets at Cape Kanin Nos in the Russia's northern regions and at Kamchatka Peninsula, respectively.
On the same day, strategic bombers launched cruise missiles aimed at targets beyond the polar circle and the Volga River region. To complete the picture, the Topol ICBM flew a training mission from Plesetsk to Kamchatka Peninsula."
http://www.russianspaceweb.com/rockets_cruise.html
That is what I am trying to show. They are testing there payload capability and are trying to develop a new and better systems, the accustation that the topol had a cruise missile in its nose cone is possible they tested similar systems in the Past the site above gives the detail.
The chinese are testing there systems and improving there payload capabilities.
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2006 SEP 10
Eyeing China's Missileers
Hey all, Jeffrey Lewis from Arms Control Wonk.com here. After spending a couple of days crashing at Shachtman's place in NYC, I figured I needed a crosspost to say "Thanks."
ty-3.gifITAR TASS reports that China test fired a DF-31 ICBM from the Taiyuan Space Launch Center:
China has carried out a regular test launch of a Dongfeng-31 intercontinental ballistic missile. Itar-Tass was told at the Russian Defence Ministry on Tuesday that "the Chinese side had notified the Russian Defence Ministry in advance about the upcoming launching of the intercontinental missile".
"The Dongfeng-31 missile was fired from the Wuzhai launch site towards the Taklimakan desert at about midnight on Monday", a Russian ministry official said. The head section of the missile, he added, flew approximately 2.5 thousand kilometres. The Russian space control facilities had tracked the missile's start and flight.
The new Chinese intercontinental ballistic missiles will be put into
service already this year. Improved longer-range Dongfeng-31A missiles are expected to be commissioned in 2007. These two types of intercontinental silo-based ballistic missiles are compact systems, which can be moved by means of tractors along general-purpose roads.
FAS has a nice summary of the DF-31 program in relation to this, probably the sixth flight test since 1999.
The Taiyuan Space Launch Center is called the Wuzhai Space and Missile Test Center by the US intelligence community for reasons that I've never understood -- the facility is NOWHERE near Wuzhai. In fact, isn't all that close to Taiyuan -- 284 km from Taiyuan City either by train or bus.
Anyway, I found the Taiyuan facility in GoogleEarth a while back, checking it against the map on the China Great Wall Industry Corporation website. You can see most of the major areas of the center, including the technology center, telemetry station (I think) and launch complex. (Mark Wade has a very nice map, too.)
If you look a little further north of the launch complex, you can see an area that is not on the map -- a some buildings and big concrete launch pads that might be a candidate (and I stress might) for bthe DF-31 area.
Just a guess, though. The facility is huge, with something like 4 launch sites and more than a dozen support areas. I've posted a 1982 DIA report on the construction of a new assembly/checkout facility on the southeast edge of the facility -- unfortunately, that area is low resolution.
So, take a look at the site -- one aspect I would like to find is China's R&D silo for the DF-5, which is at what the intelligence community called Launch Site B. I may have to zip over to the National Archives to see if there are any reports on the facility with handy maps.
-- Jeffrey Lewis
http://www.defensetech.org/archives/cat_missiles.html
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