REPORT: China Modernizing Nuclear Arsenal with Western Tech

Posted on Friday, April 17, 2026
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by Ben Solis
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Weapons of mass destruction. Chinese ICBM missile. War Background. Nuclear Missile.

A new report is offering an unprecedented look inside China’s nuclear weapons infrastructure – and its findings carry serious implications for U.S. national security.

Titled “Dancers at the Knife’s Edge: PLA Rocket Force Nuclear Warhead Management,” the study provides a rare window into how the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) stores, maintains, and transports its nuclear warheads. Drawing on open-source Chinese materials, it traces the movement of these weapons from a central stockpile buried deep in the Qinling Mountains to operational bases and missile brigades across the country.

What emerges is a picture of a rapidly expanding nuclear force that is increasingly prepared for war – but still reliant on imported and, in some cases, stolen Western technology to function.

The report outlines the PLA Rocket Force’s rising nuclear war readiness, citing frequent wartime transport and maintenance drills and a broader shift toward a more active operational posture.

China’s nuclear program, launched in the 1950s and brought to fruition with its first successful test in 1964, has entered a new phase under President Xi Jinping, who has overhauled the military since taking control in 2012. Today, much of China’s warhead stockpile is concentrated at a highly secretive facility known as “Hongchuan,” supported by a network of bases responsible for storage, testing, security, and transport.

Although the PLA prides itself on secrecy, the report reveals the geolocations, names, and missions of many of these units, providing an unusually detailed look into one of the CCP’s most guarded military programs.

Military analysts and former PLA dissidents called the report “groundbreaking,” arguing that it confirms long-held suspicions that the CCP is amassing destructive weapons not simply as a deterrent, but as tools it is prepared to use. The Chinese Communist Party, adhering to Marxist-Leninist doctrine, views nuclear weapons as an intentional component of its rivalry with the United States – not merely a defensive safeguard.

Professor Jun De Níng, a former advisor to CCP Secretary General Hu Yaobang, reacted bluntly to the report’s findings. “If anyone still needed proof, this report shouts it – they are mad,” he said. “The party can’t govern responsibly.”

Dr. Xiàhóu Li Wei, a former high-ranking CCP security official who defected in the 1990s, offered a similarly stark warning. “The supposed liberalization never happened,” he said. “This discovery confirms the CCP’s ongoing readiness for catastrophic war, as Mao planned.” He also pointed to the regime’s troubling priorities: “The Chinese people suffer in poverty as the CCP leads the country to ruin.”

Another former PLA officer who defected to the West highlighted how the regime itself conceptualizes its nuclear forces. According to him, nuclear units are referred to internally as “Guardians of National Treasure.”

“It shows the party’s principles and priorities; for the party, national treasures are not the people but weapons of mass destruction,” he said. The official, who has since become Catholic, also alluded to the Gospel of Matthew, adding, “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

One of the report’s most revealing conclusions is that foreign technology is essential to China’s nuclear modernization. The PLA’s warhead management system depends on imported equipment at nearly every level, from basic protective gear to advanced robotics used in handling radioactive materials.

The report highlights products from American, German, French, and Swedish companies, including face masks, hazmat suits, oxygen tanks, radiation sensors, and remote demolition robots. Some of these items are likely subject to export controls, raising serious questions about how they are reaching sensitive Chinese military programs.

Western educational institutions are equally crucial. Chinese experts regularly obtain advanced degrees abroad and bring that knowledge back to advance Chinese military capabilities. Universities like Tsinghua and Zhejiang serve as major training centers, often maintaining ties with leading Western institutions. The implication is clear: China’s nuclear program is not developing in isolation, but is being enabled by access to Western knowledge, technology, and markets.

At the same time, the report reveals troubling weaknesses in the system itself. A large portion of China’s nuclear stockpile is concentrated in a single central facility, creating a significant point of vulnerability. Transporting warheads across vast distances by rail and road – sometimes over several days – introduces additional risks, including the possibility of accidents, disruption, or interdiction in the event of conflict.

While PLA units emphasize their training and safety protocols, the scale and frequency of these operations suggest a system under increasing strain.

There are also indications of deeper structural problems. The report describes outdated infrastructure, potential cybersecurity vulnerabilities, and alarming safety lapses. In one instance, radioactive dust at a storage site exposed workers to serious health risks, causing rashes, breathing problems, and long-term complications while authorities reportedly withheld the true cause from those affected. This is one more confirmation that the CCP treats its own people as disposable instruments in pursuit of state power.

Former PLA officers were also quick to point out exaggerations about China’s capabilities. One dissident dismissed a claim that a unit had improved its electronic jamming effectiveness by over 200 percent as “nonsense,” noting that the PLA has rarely achieved even modest gains due to bureaucracy and corruption. Stories of mismanagement, such as defective equipment or falsified performance metrics, continue to circulate, reinforcing doubts about the system’s reliability.

Taken together, the report presents a stark picture. China’s nuclear forces are expanding rapidly and becoming more operationally capable, reflecting a deliberate effort by the CCP to strengthen its strategic position. At the same time, that system remains dependent on foreign inputs and burdened by inefficiencies, vulnerabilities, and questionable practices.

Physicist and former French diplomat Jean Luis Harcourt, known for his work in disarmament policy, praised the U.S. for exposing the CCP’s disruptive role and warned that much of the world has yet to grasp the stakes. “Most of the world is still at national security siesta,” he said.

For the United States, the implications are clear. China’s nuclear buildup is real, but it is not self-sustaining. It relies in part on access to Western technology, research, and expertise. If the West were to act in concert as it did during the Cold War by tightening export controls, restricting access to sensitive academic programs, and limiting the CCP’s reach into critical industries, it could significantly slow China’s nuclear ambitions.

If not, the report suggests, Beijing will continue to build, refine, and expand its arsenal.

Ben Solis is the pen name of an international affairs journalist, historian, and researcher.

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