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China’s DF-41 Dongfeng ICBM, inducted in 2017, boasts a 12000-15000 km range, MIRV capability, and rapid launch, marking China as a top nuclear power alongside the US and Russia

China’s DF-41 missile is seen as a rival to America’s Minuteman III. (AP Photo)
China’s rapid strides in defence technology have once again drawn global attention, with its most advanced intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), the DF-41 Dongfeng, emerging as the centrepiece of its growing strategic arsenal. While China has made remarkable achievements across sectors, from high-speed rail to fifth-generation fighter jets, it is its nuclear-capable missiles that have placed the country firmly in the league of top military powers.
The DF-41, formally inducted in 2017, is regarded as one of the most powerful ICBMs in existence today. With a reported range of 12,000-15,000 kilometres, the missile is capable of striking any part of the United States mainland. Travelling at speeds of up to Mach 25 (31,000 kmph), the missile can deliver devastation in minutes, a capability that few nations possess.
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India’s BrahMos cruise missile, though counted among the world’s most lethal tactical weapons, does not compare with the DF-41 in terms of range or payload. In contrast, the Dongfeng missile represents the cutting edge of China’s long-range deterrent, forcing adversaries to re-examine their missile defence strategies.
Historical Evolution
The Dongfeng project dates back to 1986. Its first test was conducted in 1994, and by 2010, the missile was handed over to China’s Second Artillery Corps, later reconstituted as the People’s Liberation Army Rocket Force in 2016. Between 2012 and 2016, several tests were conducted before the missile was officially showcased at the 2019 military parade marking the 70th anniversary of the People’s Republic of China.
The nomenclature itself carries symbolic weight. Dongfeng, meaning “East Wind”, was inspired by a remark by Mao Zedong during the Cold War, asserting that the “East Wind prevails over the West Wind” after China acquired missile technology from the Soviet Union.
Technical Edge
Unlike earlier Chinese missiles that used liquid fuel and required lengthy preparation, the DF-41 is powered by solid fuel, enabling quicker launch readiness. It is a three-stage missile and is believed to carry MIRV (Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry Vehicle) warheads. Chinese state media claims the missile can carry up to 10 warheads, though most Western experts estimate its effective capacity at three to five.
The missile is also equipped with decoys and penetration aids, specifically designed to defeat advanced anti-missile systems such as those deployed by the United States. In addition, Beijing has developed the DF-41 in three deployment variants – road-mobile launchers, rail-based systems disguised as passenger trains, and silo-based launchers in remote regions such as Xinjiang, Gansu and Inner Mongolia.
Comparison With Global Peers
The DF-41 is widely seen as China’s answer to America’s Minuteman III, which has a range of about 13,000 km but is a much older system, first fielded in the 1970s. Russia, meanwhile, is working on the RS-28 Sarmat, dubbed “Satan 2″, which may eventually extend to 18,000 km. Within China’s own arsenal, the DF-41 far outperforms earlier variants such as the DF-4, DF-5, and DF-31, the latter limited to a range of 8,000 km with a single warhead.
Expanding Nuclear Stockpile
China continues to assert its adherence to a “no first use” policy on nuclear weapons, claiming its deterrence strategy is based solely on retaliation. Yet, international reports suggest Beijing is rapidly expanding its nuclear capabilities.
According to a 2022 statement by the US Department of Defence, China possessed around 350 ICBMs, while a Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) report (2023), estimated its nuclear warhead stockpile at about 500, an increase of 90 within a year. Defence analysts predict that at its current pace, China could surpass both the United States and Russia in missile numbers over the next decade.
A Strategic Signal
China’s decision to test an ICBM outside its territory in recent years, after nearly four decades, was viewed as a deliberate signal of its expanding reach and strategic intent. While speculation surrounds whether that test involved the DF-31AG, attention continues to remain fixed on the DF-41, which military experts describe as the sharpest arrow in China’s nuclear quiver.
China
September 10, 2025, 14:53 IST
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