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China increases ability to strike U.S. with sub-carried missiles

China has six nuclear submarines carrying intercontinental ballistic missiles that can reach the U.S. from China's waters, according to head of pacific fleet.

China has a new missile loaded onto submarines that can strike the continental U.S. from the South China Sea, according to reports.

U.S. Navy Admiral Samuel Paparo, the head of the U.S. Pacific Fleet told a group of military reporters in Washington on Friday that China’s Jin-class submarines are "equipped with JL-3 intercontinental ballistic missiles," Bloomberg reported.

"They were built to threaten the United States," the admiral said. "We keep close track of those submarines."

CHINA BASHES US OVER SUB IN SOUTH CHINA SEA AFTER COLLISION WITH UNKNOWN OBJECT

The Department of Defense issued its annual report on China’s military capabilities in November 2021, which suggested the People’s Liberation Army Navy, or PLAN, will soon gain the ability to target the continental U.S. from littoral waters, particularly the South China Sea and Bohai Gulf.

When asked by reporters whether the six submarines outfitted with the JL-3 missiles had conducted patrols near Hawaii, Bloomberg said Paparo declined to comment.

The report from the Pentagon said the PLAN had 12 nuclear subs, six of which were equipped with the previous intercontinental ballistic missiles called JL-2. 

SATELLITE IMAGES SUGGEST CHINA MAY HAVE DEVELOPED NEW CLASS OF NUCLEAR-POWERED SUBMARINE

The JL-2, the report said, was China’s first credible sea-based nuclear deterrent.

The JL-3 has a longer range than the JL-2, which gives China the range it would need to reach the U.S.

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