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What is the DF-41 missile and how does it fit into China’s ICBM programme?

Last month’s launch of Beijing’s deadliest intercontinental ballistic missile outside Chinese airspace puts spotlight on its fast growing nuclear arsenal

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China’s PLA Rocket Force launches an intercontinental ballistic missile carrying a dummy warhead from an undisclosed location. Photo: AFP

Almost a decade has passed since the People’s Liberation Army pulled the trigger on President Xi Jinping’s plans for a massive overhaul of the world’s biggest military. In the first of a series on Chinese weapon systems, Seong Hyeon Choi looks at the sharp end of the country’s missile programme.

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When China conducted an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) test outside its airspace for the first time in 44 years last month, international attention zeroed in on advances in the country’s rocketry programme.
The missile used in the test is thought to have been a DF-31AG, a variant of a third-generation weapon that went into service about two decades ago.

But the People’s Liberation Army has developed an even more advanced kind of ICBM, the fourth-generation DF-41, which can go further and carry more warheads.

China tests ICBM capable of reaching US mainland with launch into Pacific Ocean

The DF-41’s origins

The DF-41 was launched in 2017 as part of the Dongfeng missile series – a family of surface-to-surface ballistic missiles.

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