Advertisement
China’s hypersonic warfare data link could dazzle Nato’s war machine: scientists
Beijing’s new military communication network enables real-time coordination to enemy attacks during high-speed combat
Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
20

Stephen Chenin Beijing
Chinese defence researchers have unveiled a groundbreaking data link system that could decisively outpace Nato’s current military communications, tipping the balance of military power with high-speed warfare.
Engineered for the extreme demands of large-scale hypersonic combat – where aircraft scream through the skies at Mach 5 and missiles hurtle forward at Mach 11 – the new network achieves time synchronisation accuracy within five nanoseconds, dwarfing the performance of Nato’s flagship Link 16 system by two orders of magnitude.
This leap, developed by the China Electronics Technology Group Corporation (CETC), enables real-time, secure coordination between hypersonic platforms, ground command centres, radar networks, naval fleets and satellite intelligence – despite the immense technical challenges posed by blistering speeds and rapidly shifting geometries.
Advertisement
Experts said this innovation could mark a strategic shift: from isolated hypersonic breakthroughs to a fully networked, cooperative strike ecosystem. Without equivalent capabilities, Western militaries could be left “time blind”, unable to react to coordinated hypersonic swarms operating with surgical precision.
As China prepares to unveil its most advanced systems in a coming military parade, the implications for global defence dynamics are both profound and urgent, the experts said.
Advertisement
The new data link addresses a critical challenge in hypersonic warfare: at relative speeds that could exceed 4km (2.4 miles) per second, even extremely small timing errors could translate to kilometre-level targeting miscalculations.
Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x