China is reportedly expanding its Nuclear sites, satellite imagery analysis from 2022 to 2026 reveals major expansions at covert nuclear weapons sites in China’s Sichuan Province.
According to a Sunday New York Times report, Geospatial expert Renny Babiarz’s findings highlight China’s accelerated nuclear buildup since 2019, signaling a strategic shift in its capabilities.
The report further states that in Sichuan’s Zitong site, satellite images show new bunkers and ramparts in a valley, alongside a freshly built complex with extensive piping suited for hazardous materials.
Analysts indicate this setup aligns with high-explosives testing to perfect chemical detonators that compress nuclear material in warheads.
Hui Zhang, a physicist at Harvard Kennedy School who studies China’s nuclear programs, reviewed Babiarz’s findings and told the New York Times, “You have a layer of high explosives and the shock wave at the same time implodes into the center. This needs blast tests to perfect them.”
Recent satellite imagery shows the structure has been refurbished with new vents and heat-dispersion features, alongside fresh construction next to the main building.
Border Security Risks for India?
Sichuan lies relatively close to India’s Himalayan frontier. The expansion poses profound strategic challenges for India amid persistent border tensions and shifting regional power dynamics.
Enhanced Chinese nuclear capabilities could embolden aggressive postures in Ladakh or Arunachal, complicating de-escalation talks.
Although India and China have mended their relations recently since the SCO summit in Tianjin, considering New Delhi’s past relations with Beijing, the expansion imposes border threats.
Beijing’s nuclear enhancements with new bunkers for high-explosives testing and plutonium processing facilities could lower the threshold for escalation, as a more confident China might test India’s resolve in future standoffs.
The expansion further complicates India’s no-first-use nuclear doctrine and deterrence strategy. It signals Beijing’s pivot to strategic parity with the US, rejecting trilateral arms talks and straining regional stability as India bolsters Agni-V and canisterised missiles.
Global Nuclear Dynamics
The reported buildup by China, signals its ambition to achieve nuclear parity with the US and Russia, potentially expanding its arsenal to 1,000 warheads by 2030 amid the erosion of treaties like New START.
China is secretly making plutonium parts for nukes and testing explosives, shifting from a small nuclear force to a bolder one with land, sea, and air weapons. This somehow makes it harder for the US to protect its Asian allies with its nuclear umbrella.
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: ZEE News







