
China State Media Reveals New Nuclear-Armed Submarine
The report by China Central Television also claimed this was the "first disclosure" of a new Chinese submarine conducting a long-distance mission in an undisclosed maritime location.
Newsweek reached out to the Chinese Defense Ministry for comment via email.
China possesses more than 370 naval vessels, making it the world's largest combat fleet by hull count, including six Type 094 nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines, each armed with 12 nuclear ballistic missiles, according to the Federation of American Scientists.
All Type 094 submarines are homeported at Longpo Naval Base on Hainan Island in southern China, which borders the South China Sea, and represent China's "first credible sea-based nuclear deterrent," the Pentagon assessed in its report on Chinese military power.
Ballistic missile submarines are the most survivable leg of China's nuclear triad, alongside land-based ballistic missiles and nuclear-capable bombers, because they are extremely difficult to detect while conducting patrols that maintain a constant at-sea deterrent presence.
A Chinese submarine, unidentified in the report, was seen departing a naval base at an undisclosed location, according to footage aired by China Central Television on Thursday.
Australia-based naval analyst Alex Luck told Newsweek the submarine is one of six Type 094 boats in service, suggesting the footage was likely taken at Longpo Naval Base. It remains unclear whether the submarine carried out its mission in the South China Sea.
While the footage offered a rare glimpse inside the submarine and how sailors operate it, certain interior sections were blurred, likely for operational security reasons. It was not immediately clear whether the interior scenes were filmed while the submarine was at sea.
"Today is a peaceful era, but tomorrow may mark the start of war. On the day real war begins, we will wait only for the order—and then launch this missile without hesitation," said Ma Xiaohui, a sailor assigned to an unidentified submarine unit.
The Type 094 submarine can be armed with either JL-2 or JL-3 ballistic missiles, which have ranges of 4,488 miles and 6,214 miles, respectively. The JL-3 missile is capable of targeting portions of the U.S. mainland when launched from China's littoral waters.
As part of Chinese President Xi Jinping's accelerated development of nuclear forces, China's next-generation nuclear-armed ballistic missile submarine, the Type 096, is expected to enter service in the late 2020s or early 2030s, according to the Pentagon's assessment report.
In comparison, the United States currently operates a fleet of 14 Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines, each armed with up to 20 Trident II D5LE nuclear missiles. According to the Federation of American Scientists, this missile has an estimated range of 7,456 miles.
The Pentagon, in its report on Chinese military power: "The [People's Republic of China]'s next-generation Type 096 [nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines] will reportedly be armed with follow-on longer range [submarine-launched ballistic missiles]."
The Federation of American Scientists, in its report on Chinese nuclear weapons: "Whenever they are in the South China Sea, China's [nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines] typically appear to be accompanied by a protection detail, including surface warships and aircraft (and possibly attack submarines) capable of tracking adversarial submarines."
It remains to be seen whether the Chinese military will disclose details of other nuclear forces in the coming days as it celebrates the 98th anniversary of its founding on Friday.
Related Articles
New Chinese Warship Debuts in Contested WatersMap Shows What Trump Tariff Rates Are For Each CountryAmerica Needs a Digital Dollar | OpinionIran Reacts to New US 'Assault'
2025 NEWSWEEK DIGITAL LLC.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Gaza aid distribution site photos are staged for emotional effect, German media claims
The BILD report focuses on a widely circulated photo of desperate Gazan women and children holding pots and pans in front of a food distribution site. There has been significant media attention over the last few days regarding reports by two German-language papers - BILD and Süddeutsche Zeitung - that accuse Gaza-based press photographers of staging photos of starving civilians. The issue of staged photos or photos taken out of context came to a head at the end of July when the Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) said that a picture of a Gazan youth being portrayed as starving is actually suffering from a genetic disease. TheBILD report focuses on a widely circulated photo of desperate Gazan women and children holding pots and pans in front of a food distribution site. Except photos taken by others at the same site show that the hoard is actually standing opposite freelance photographer Anas Zayed Fteiha, commissioned by the Turkish news agency Anadolu, BILD argues. The pots and pans are not being held up to the food distribution site, but the photographer, which Bild claims is staging for means of propaganda. Undistributed photos show Gazans calmly receiving aid Additionally, BILD adds that his photos at the Gaza aid distribution site show mainly women and children, but that other photos at the same site show mostly adult men calmly waiting for and receiving food. Fteiha did not distribute these ones. "I assume that many of these pictures with starving and sick children are simply staged or come from other contexts," emeritus history professor and photography expert Gerhard Paul told SZ. Paul, who has been researching images from Israel and Gaza for 25 years, said the photos are not fake, but "people are presented in a certain way or provided with a falsifying caption to mobilize our visual memory and emotions." Paul told SZ that he and his students at the University of Flensburg recreated the scenes from images of various wars in three dimensions in order to understand the situation depicted, which is often not easy to understand from the two-dimensional image. "Where is the photographer? Who is standing around him?" he asks. "What do the people depicted in the picture see? Do they see what we suspect, for example a food distribution? Or are they facing photographers?" "The images also have an additional function," Paul explained. "They are intended to overwrite the brutal images of the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023. Many people don't even remember these pictures. Hamas is a master at staging images." However, he stressed that the journalists and photographers in Gaza are in a dangerous position, and due to their proximity to Hamas terrorists, cannot move freely. "Little bypasses Hamas," Christopher Resch of Reporters Without Borders told SZ. Resch also told SZ that the concept of photographers staging photos is not unique to Gaza, and is not necessarily problematic. "I don't think it's reprehensible when a photographer instructs people to stand here and there with their pots," he said. "As long as it approximates reality." Nevertheless, BILD's report stressed that the photographer in question - Fteiha - is not exactly unbiased in his photojournalism. He posts videos to social media saying "f*** Israel" and works for a news agency that speaks directly to the Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan who has had ties to Hamas. As a result of the investigation, the German Press Agency and Agence France Press told BILD that they will no longer work Fteiha and would carefully check the pictures of other photo reporters as well, whereas Reuters says his photos "meet the standards of accuracy, independence and impartiality." "Despite his bias, his photos are published by major outlets like CNN, BBC, and Reuters," Israel's foreign ministry seethed in its response to the two reports. "With Hamas controlling nearly all media in Gaza, these photographers aren't reporting, they're producing propaganda." "This investigation underscores how Pallywood has gone mainstream with staged images and ideological bias shaping international coverage, while the suffering of Israeli hostages and Hamas atrocities are pushed out of frame," the ministry concluded. The Jerusalem Post watched the video taken from the aid destruction site a few days ago, shared by Al Jazeera Arabic. It is worth noting that the same setting of the women and children with pots and pans is seen in the video, and they are receiving food, so it is possible that the photo by Fteiha was taken before the aid workers arrived. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
On-site sortation and valet services aim to fix multifamily waste contamination
This story was originally published on Waste Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Waste Dive newsletter. San Francisco is often touted as a poster child for waste reduction. In 2009 it became the first U.S. city to adopt mandatory recycling and composting. But when it comes to compliance, this bright green city has a dark side: apartment buildings. 'Out of all the sectors, multifamily struggles the most with contamination,' said Freddy Coronado, residential zero waste specialist for the San Francisco Environment Department. Multifamily properties account for many of the city's large refuse generators — buildings that produce at least 40 cubic yards or more of uncompacted refuse per week. And upwards of 75% of them fail waste-stream audits that the city performs, according to Coronado. The audits are required as part of the city's Refuse Separation Ordinance, which it enacted in 2019. The RSO covers roughly 450 buildings, including 150 multifamily dwellings, which generate 20% of San Francisco's waste stream. Properties that fail an audit must hire a service provider to perform onsite sortation for at least two years. The city offers training to these providers, called zero waste facilitators, to ensure they sort properly. These organizations take that role very seriously by ripping open every trash bag to pull out recyclable and organic waste. That's because the city has strict contamination thresholds: up to 25% in the waste stream, 10% for recycling and 5% for organics. While many municipalities don't have these types of rules, there's still a growing demand for onsite sortation and other high-touch waste handling services at multifamily properties across the country. These companies help improve recycling and organics diversion, address persistent illegal dumping and even collect waste from residents' doorsteps in a service known as trash valet. Trash valet is the second most-requested amenity in the multifamily sector right now (behind pet infrastructure, like play areas and waste stations), said Kevin Schwartz, senior director of governmental affairs for Valet Living. Schwartz said the company collects trash, recycling (and in some markets, organics) from more than six million residents, usually five nights per week. The company is increasingly providing onsite sortation, sometimes separately from doorstep collection, in California, Oregon and Washington, as well as cities with organics diversion requirements like Austin, Texas, and Gainesville, Florida. Providers are looking to offer more of these types of services to multifamily clients, as indicated by Ally Waste's recent acquisition of California-based WasteXperts, which has provided multifamily recycling and diversion services for decades. 'A few years ago, we were just a pure play valet trash company,' said Ally Waste COO Harrison Crum. 'That's a very niche service only for multifamily. And what we realized is that properties have a lot more trash issues than just getting trash from doorstep to dumpster.' The business model In 2012, Lainika Johnson joined Republic Services as a sales representative in Sacramento, California. She knew nothing about the waste industry, but that quickly changed. 'I asked if I could move my desk to the window so I could watch the transfer station floor,' she said. 'That was fascinating to me … but to other people, they were probably like, 'okay, you're a little crazy about trash.'' Johnson's interests eventually moved upstream as she fielded more and more questions from commercial customers about California's recycling and organics regulations, and concerns about how to handle illegal dumping on their properties. She took a sales role with Valet Living, and eventually decided to branch out on her own, founding TrashLogic in 2016. Today, TrashLogic provides waste handling and sortation services to commercial and multifamily properties. Its first step, Johnson explained, is generally to look over a client's recent hauler charges and observe residents' behaviors to see what they toss, where and how often. 'It's about redesigning the whole system of waste, not just coming in and saying, 'oh, we can clean up your [waste] enclosures,'' she said. Instead, TrashLogic determines whether the property has too many bins or dumpsters, or if they're poorly placed. Some might be overly full and others not maximized. By changing how the waste and recycling collection areas are designed, Johnson said, TrashLogic can often lower properties' hauling costs and reduce overage fees and contamination penalties that some haulers charge. 'We charge for our service and our service costs. Usually the [client's] savings covers most of our cost,' she said. Miyon Mael, chief growth officer at WasteXperts, noted that service adjustments can be very effective in areas with high hauler fees, like Los Angeles. 'Even though you may have overage charges or overflowing containers, it doesn't necessarily mean that those materials are being placed in the right containers. So with boots on the ground we can actually divert that material, place them in the right containers and we could definitely drive down some trash costs,' said Mael. Trash valet services are often billed directly to tenants. A quick survey of rates from various companies in the San Francisco area show that fees range from $20 to $40 per month, per unit. Outside of valet services, Mael said that some properties are able to bill back costs of waste collection to tenants, in municipalities that consider it a utility. Large apartment buildings in urban areas often collect waste centrally, generally using trash chutes. Newer construction or renovated properties sometimes have up to three chutes for different materials — or a retrofitted chute that allows residents to direct waste to different bins using integrated diverters. But the diverters can be difficult for residents to use and are prone to clogging, said Coronado. Mael said WasteXperts provides green compostable bags for food waste and instructs residents to send them down trash chutes. Even if the waste streams are commingled, she said, the bags are easy to divert. 'Because it is a translucent bag, we can easily identify if there's contamination [mixed in with the organics],' she said. Coronado noted that many large buildings in San Francisco have had to remove trash compactors in order to reduce contamination by making it easier for sorters to access refuse. And new apartment buildings in the city are now required to install three separate trash chutes. Staying on top of bulk items in less dense complexes with large parking lots is key, Johnson said. Waste can add up once a location becomes known as a dumping site and sometimes people who don't live at the apartment complex dump there, too. 'We see a lot of TVs, we see a lot of furniture and we see a lot of car parts,' explained Aaron Lee, a waste flow technician supervisor at TrashLogic. Changing behavior Improving multifamily recycling is an ongoing challenge, and one that experts say requires ongoing education and engagement. Mael said part of the problem is a lack of accountability in large communities, since it can be very difficult to tie high rates of contamination to particular residents. 'Tenants move in and move [out], and there are language barriers, cultural barriers,' to proper sorting and reducing contamination, said Coronado. San Francisco is trying different approaches to improve compliance, from door-to-door outreach, to holding educational meetings for residents with refreshments. But, ultimately, the steep penalties and requirements to hire zero waste facilitators is what really moves the needle for property managers. In San Francisco multifamily buildings face two different financial incentives to remain in compliance with the city's diversion requirements and to avoid contamination. If a property fails a waste stream audit, it must create and share a compliance plan with the city, which includes hiring a zero waste facilitator. Failing to do so within four months triggers an administrative penalty of $500 per day for up to 60 days, and the fees increase from there. The buildings are also subject to contamination fees based on inspections from the city's franchise hauler, Recology. Those fees can be up to 50% of the property's bill, which can easily add hundreds or thousands of dollars, each month. Coronado said the potential for these steep fines has resulted in a high compliance rate among properties that fail audits, and that the city has not yet charged administrative or contamination fees to multifamily properties. While artificial intelligence and automation are gaining traction in many parts of the recycling system, the companies that provide manual sortation don't see demand for their services decreasing any time soon. Miyon Mael, Aaron Lee and Kevin Schwartz all agreed that it won't be a concern until robots are able to climb stairs, drive trucks, jump into dumpsters and deftly sort all manner of trash. Recommended Reading EPR, multifamily improvements could boost stagnant 21% residential recycling rate, TRP says


Newsweek
4 hours ago
- Newsweek
Owner DNA Tests Dog for Health Clues—It's the Breed That Shocks Her
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A pet parent who adopted a dog about two months ago used a DNA test to hopefully find clues about the canine's health history. What she learned from the results left her stunned. Raquel, known on Reddit as u/BrushGlittering2337, told Newsweek that she adopted her dog, Belinda, from the Herding Dog Rescue of Central Oregon. The animal shelter said that the dog came in as a stray after a person found her in the middle of nowhere and searched for the dog's owners. "There is also a possibility that she fell out of the back of a truck," Raquel said. When Raquel first saw Belinda, the rescue listed her as a border collie. However, Raquel became skeptical. The short hair threw her off, leading her to believe Belinda might have been a border collie mix. But the details didn't matter. She knew Belinda would fit right at home with her. Curiosity got the best of Raquel, and she ordered a DNA test for the dog, mainly to be aware of potential health issues within her breed and personality traits. But to her shock, she learned Belinda was indeed a purebred border collie. Photos of a purebred border collie named Belinda that came to a rescue organization as a stray. Photos of a purebred border collie named Belinda that came to a rescue organization as a stray. BrushGlittering2337/Reddit The result left her questioning the reliability of these doggy DNA tests. She posted the story and pictures of Belinda to Reddit under the subreddit channel r/BorderCollie, hoping other pet parents could provide insight. "Part of my skepticism about Belinda being a pure border collie was due to her calm and quiet temperament," Raquel said. "She does not have the typical high-energy personality of a border collie, so I assumed she might be mixed with a calmer breed." Bred for herding sheep, border collies are energetic dogs and workaholics, according to the American Kennel Club. They're agile, athletic and known to be the smartest dog breeds. As far as personalities go, Belinda, on the other hand, is "so quiet." Raquel said she does not bark. She's patient with other dogs and people. And although the short fur confused Raquel, border collies have two types of coats: rough and smooth. The rough coat is medium-length and feathered, while the smooth coat, which Belinda has, is shorter and more coarse. Despite the surprise DNA result, she couldn't imagine her life without Belinda. Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@ with some details about your best friend, and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.