It was reported just a couple of days ago that China had achieved a huge leap in hypersonic propulsion technology. It simulated the world’s first oblique detonation engine using standard aviation kerosene in Beijing’s JF-12 to an altitude of 40km and speeds up to Mach 16 (about 20,000 km/h), making hypersonic travel and military dominance a reality. This means that in not too distant a future, its missiles could evade all defences!
Currently, it already has its
own WS-15 engine to power J-20 fighter – a fifth-generation stealth combat plane
that is said to be no inferior to America’s F-35 series. And not too long
ago, two new unusual flying objects were seen, one over the sky of Chengdu and the
other, the sky of Shenyang. They might not be the prototypes, but certainly they
were telling us that China was already in a very advanced stage of ushering in their
6th generation fighters.
These feats were totally
inconceivable seven or eight years ago. How has China’s aerospace come so far
in such a short time?
I believe it is the Ukrainian factor.
Before its dissolution
in 1991, Soviet Union’s nuclear arsenal was kept in four of its 15 republics – Russia,
Ukraine, Belarus, and Kazakhstan. Ukraine held about one third (about
1,700 warheads) of the inventory. Ukrainians also had significant knowledge of
its design and production. However, these weapons were not under their control.
Upon
declaring independence, Ukraine pledged to rid itself of nuclear weapons and in
December 1994 the leaders of Ukraine, Russia, United Kingdom, and the United
States signed a memorandum to provide Ukraine with security assurances in
connection with its joining of the treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons.
But
Ukraine could not get their acts together; the country was constantly plagued
by political turmoil. The US was certainly the culprit. And due to mismanagement,
Ukraine’s economy has been going down the drain since independence. It had to
sell its family silvers.
Motor Sich came into the
scene.
The firm had inherited a large part of the former Soviet Union's aero engine manufacturing capabilities. It produced
turbofan, turboprop and rotary-wing turboshaft engines that powered aircraft in
Russian service. In 2014, Motor Sich severed ties with Russia, which was its
biggest client, and consequently had to look for new markets. It had no money. China
was looking to advance its aerospace engine development and lost no time in knocking
at Motor Sich’s door. Before this, China was already using Ukrainian engines to
most of its fighter planes – from J-10 and all the way to J-20.
In 2017, China’s Skyrizon Aviation purchased
a 41% holding in the company. Skyrizon Aviation agreed to invest $250 million in
its Zaporizhzhia plant and helped Motor Sich to set up a new assembly and
servicing plant in Chongqing.
But mood was already fast
changing in Ukraine. NATO wannabe Volodymyr Zelenskyy was
firmly in power. In March 2021, the Ukrainian government announced its
intention to nationalize Motor Sich by buying back shares from Chinese
holders. Zelenskyy also signed a decree imposing sanctions on Skyrizon.
The latter responded with a $3.5 billion arbitration suit. Again, it was
obviously who was behind the decision.
Be that as it may, China had two good years to do what they
wanted in Motor Sich. With its unparallel ability to absorb and improve, China
began to come up with advanced engines. The rest is history.
(Incidentally, following the Russian invasion of Ukraine,
Motor Sic’s Zaporizhzhia plant had been struck multiple times by the Russians. It
could have been destroyed by now.)
Besides jet engines, China had also used Ukraine’s UGT-25000 gas turbines to power its warships, including the very formidable Type 055 destroyers, which have a displacement of 13,000 tonnes.
Today, Chinese are eagerly
waiting for the full commissioning of the country’s Type 003 aircraft carrier Fujian,
said to be equipped with state-of-the-art electromagnetic catapult system. This
feat could not have been possible without the covert purchase of an unfinished aircraft
carrier from Ukraine in 1998.
We all know Liaoning (辽宁舰) is China’s first aircraft
carrier. It was originally christened Riga and renamed Varyag in
1990. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, construction was halted,
and the ship was put up for sale by Ukraine. The stripped hulk was sold
in 1998 and after much delay, was towed to Dalian’s naval shipyard in 2002.
Xu Zengping is largely an unsung
hero in China; he bought the ship in an auction in 1998 for $20 million,
under the pretext of converting it into a casino.
The ship’s passage from
Ukraine to China was torturous. When the tugboat approached the Bosphorus,
Turkey denied permission for the ship to pass through, and the ship had to
spend the next 16 months being towed around the Black Sea! China had to offer
heavy trade and tourism concessions before it was allowed to move on. The whole
journey was 28,200 km long and done under an average speed of six knots. Contrary
to initial reports that the ship had no engines, all its four engines remained
intact at the time of purchase. A refit restored them to working order in 2011.
Today, it is in a combat-ready state.
We all know the war has devastated the country. But Ukraine suffered brain drains even before the Russian invasion. Before the Soviet Union fell apart, Ukraine ranked second in terms of scientific potential amongst the fifteen former republics.
During the Soviet Union era,
demand for research and innovation was largely oriented towards heavy industry
and servicing military needs. It was incapable of adjusting. Some 20,000 young researchers
soon left the country for greener pastures.
After 30 years of relying on technologies from Ukraine, China is now completely capable of building their own military engines and turbines. Their advances have in fact frightened the US to a state of hysteria and paranoia.
We Chinese have a saying: 饮水思源
yǐn
shuǐ sī yuan, which translates to "when drinking
water, do think of its source. Even though China has arrived in terms of
aerospace technology, it should thank the Ukrainians for its incredible achievements.
Many Ukrainian scientists have
collaborated with Chinese scientists and worked in China, in universities and
in defence research bodies. It is estimated that some 50,000 to 100,000
Ukrainian citizens live in China today, especially in Beijing, Shanghai, and
Harbin. There was a highly published account of a senior Ukrainian ocean
engineering expert called Yurly Semenov who is now a professor at the Harbin
Engineering University, one of China’s top defence research universities.
Geopolitics has strange twists
and turns. Without Zelenskyy’s decision – thanks to US promptings, of course –
Chinese scientists and engineers might still be struggling to master the complexity
of the West’s advanced aerospace and naval technologies.
Good article..Sun Zs art of war, to prevent war, prepare for war, advanced defense technology so enemy fear to attack as they are shown any attack will fail
ReplyDeleteDespite many historical constraints, China's own scientists have made enough breakthroughs for many to be called 'father of':
ReplyDeleteFeng Ru (Chinese aviation)
Deng Jiaxian (Two Bombs)
Qian Sanqiang (Atomic Bomb)
Yu Min (Hydrogen Bomb)
Liu Huaqing (Modern Chinese Navy)
Wong Tsu (Boeing's first aeronautical engineer)
Huang Xuhua (China nuclear submarine)
Qian Xuesen (China aerospace; China rocket program pioneer)
Yu Hongru (Wind tunnel pioneer)
Lu Shijia (China highspeed wind tunnel)
Huang Fenglei, Ai Bangcheng, Qian Wenji, Chen Huaijin, Chen Guoxin
(China missile designers)
Lin Lanying (China aerospace materials; semiconductor materials)
Sun Jiadong (China satellites and lunar exploration)
Pan Jian-Wei (China quantum and quantum communication)
Wang Xuan (Chinese character laser photocomposition printing)
Wang Shicun (China rotor vortex dynamics)
Peng Lianmao (and team: China carbon-nanotube AI microchip)
Zuchongzhi-3 & Tianyan-504 & Sunway TaihuLight supercomputer (China quantum computer and supercomputers)
Undoubtedly, these are but a few of many yet unnamed and excludes those in the robotics, AI software, chemical, biomedical, agricultural, advanced materials, autonomous mobility, laser ballistics, radar technologies, stealth coatings, nanoscience, nuclear fusion and fission, geotechnical and other engineering fields. There's one other most intriguing and gobsmackingly intelligent - thus best left unsaid, forever.
China's state focus on technology and private sector including massive capital investments and adoption of AI-referencing using such as DeepSeek is expanding her enterprises in efficiency, innovation and applications.
Meanwhile the US is cutting state funds for research but is still trying to ban technologies to and from China. It is noted China is but 5 years behind the most advanced in the field of semiconductor equipment manufacturing. While the US has the most advanced technology in semiconductor design, its industries do not have market scale by dint of banning sales to China and thus loses earnings to reinvest in R&D, as once remarked by even its Pentagon.
With Trump's US pulling up its ramparts, greater collaboration in scitech development and marketing can be crafted between China, Europe, Turkey, Israel, Japan and South Korea in addition to ongoing work between China and Hungarians, Ukrainians, Russians, all of whom would have by now concluded there is only chaos out of the White House in Washington DC so they might as well be pragmatic with their talents and time since the chains of American hegemony on them are rattlingly starting to loosen but with barks and bites.