Satellite images show China hardening its nuclear silo fields
Reuters finds 80+ launch pads, bunkers and octagon command sites near the Hami ICBM silos
Summary
Satellite imagery reviewed by Reuters (29 May 2026) shows China building a dense web of launch pads, bunkers and command nodes around its nuclear silo fields near Hami in eastern Xinjiang. The imagery counts 80+ pads — read as sites for mobile ICBM launchers and air-defence batteries — plus two octagon-shaped installations (140 and 230 km from the silos) with housing, armored bunkers, weapons stores, airfields and railheads. Analysts read the build as hardening for second-strike survivability, layered atop the 100+ DF-31-class silos the Pentagon has tracked across three western fields. China holds ~600 warheads now, projected past 1,000 by 2030. The disclosure lands as Beijing refuses arms-control talks and the US–Russia treaty regime has lapsed.
By the numbers
- 80+ — launch pads identified in the new imagery.
- 2 — octagon-shaped command/garrison installations, 140 and 230 km from the silos.
- 100+ — solid-fuel ICBM silos loaded across three western fields (Pentagon).
- ~600 → 1,000+ — Chinese warheads now vs projected by 2030.
Why it matters
Hardened, dispersed infrastructure makes China's land-based force more survivable and harder to target — strengthening its second-strike credibility just as great-power arms control collapses. It deepens the three-way dynamic the US faces with no treaty framework to read or constrain Beijing's intent.
What to watch
- Confirmation of what the octagon sites house (mobile missiles vs warhead mating).
- Pace of silo loading and any new fields beyond Hami/Yumen/Hanggin.
- US targeting and missile-defence responses citing the buildup.