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‘Invasion' barges and deep-sea cable cutters: why new Chinese maritime tech is spooking defense watchers

‘Invasion' barges and deep-sea cable cutters: why new Chinese maritime tech is spooking defense watchers

Yahoo25-03-2025

From a chain of massive barges stretching from a Chinese beach into the sea, to a powerful new design for cutting undersea cables at record depths, China's latest maritime innovations have captured the attention of defense experts – fueling concerns about their potential role in a future invasion of Taiwan.
While these new tools may ostensibly have civilian uses, experts say they highlight China's expanding military and technological prowess – at a time when the ruling Communist Party is ramping up pressure on Taiwan, the self-governing democracy it claims as its own and has vowed to seize by force if necessary.
China already sends fighter jets and warships near the island almost daily and stages increasingly frequent military drills to intimidate what it calls 'Taiwan separatist forces.'
Meanwhile Taiwan is looking on nervously as US President Donald Trump transforms Washington's global relationships with his mercantilist 'America First' foreign policy, discarding decades-old guarantees towards Europe and pushing long-standing Asian allies and partners to pay more for US protection.
Footage of the landing barges first surfaced – then quickly vanished – on Chinese social media this month, showing three enormous vessels stationed off a sandy beach strewn with seaweed, fishing boats and a handful of scattered tourists.
The three barges stood above the water on sturdy legs and were linked by bridges to form one giant causeway that stretched from the beach to more than 800 meters from the shore.
CNN has geolocated the video to a public beach near Zhanjiang, a port city in China's southern Guangdong province and home to the headquarters of the Chinese navy's South Sea Fleet. Satellite imagery has since confirmed their location.
Defense analysts J. Michael Dahm and Thomas Shugart said the barges constitute a 'significant upgrade' to the amphibious assault capacity of China's People Liberation Army (PLA). In the event of an invasion of Taiwan, they could form a relocatable pier, delivering large amounts of tanks, armored vehicles and other heavy equipment – once fire superiority has been established.
'The innovation really is the volume that they could potentially put onto a remote beach or a damaged port or an austere landing area, probably in excess of hundreds of vehicles per hour, if they chose to do that,' said Dahm, a retired US Navy intelligence officer and senior resident fellow at the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies.
Shugart, a former US submariner and adjunct senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security, noted the barges add to a growing list of innovative platforms, munitions and weapon systems the Chinese military has tested in recent years.
'There's nothing like them in the West. I have never seen anything like what we're seeing here,' he said.
CNN has reached out to China's defense ministry for comment.
Taiwan's defense ministry said it had assessed that the new barges were 'designed with an extendable ramp to serve as a makeshift dock, enabling the rapid offloading of main battle tanks and various vehicles in support of amphibious operations.' It said it would continue to monitor the barges and assess their capabilities and operational limitations.
Meanwhile, Chinese researchers from state-affiliated institutions claimed to have developed a powerful deep-sea device: a cable cutter capable of severing heavily fortified communication and power lines at depths of up to 4,000 meters – nearly twice the depth of the world's deepest undersea cable.
The new design, published last month in the peer-reviewed Chinese journal Mechanical Engineer and first reported by the South China Morning Post, emerges amid growing concerns over the vulnerability of Taiwan's critical infrastructure. Recently, suspicious damage to the island's undersea cables has fueled fears of Chinese efforts to undermine the island's communications with the outside world.
Collin Koh, a research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS) in Singapore, said cable-cutting tools are commonly used for maintenance, and a breakthrough in the ability to sever cables at record depths with great efficiency isn't alarming in itself.
'But what is alarming here is the political context that we attach to it,' he noted, pointing to recent incidents of undersea cable damage involving Chinese vessels around Taiwan and in the Baltic Sea.
The concern is that in the event of an invasion, China could sever the undersea cables around Taiwan, sowing panic among its public and potentially disrupting the island's military communication with the US and other partners.
But Koh pointed out that the new cable-cutting design may have existed so far only in the experimental stage. 'Whether it has translated into operationalized tool for use is a big question mark,' he said.
The video of the landing barges offered the first close-up look at what the Naval News reported in January as 'special and unusual barges' spotted at Guangzhou Shipyard. The outlet described them as reminiscent of Britain's Mulberry Harbors, which were built for the Allied invasion of Normandy during World War II.
While some analysts suggest the barges could serve civilian purposes such as humanitarian relief, many experts – both in and outside Taiwan – believe they were built primarily for a military purpose.
Su Tzu-yun, a director at the Institute for National Defense Security Research in Taiwan, said the barges could offer the PLA a strategic advantage by creating makeshift costal landing points – particularly if Taiwan destroys its own ports in self-defense in the event of an invasion.
'Such barges have six or eight hydro feet that can lift them out of the water to create a stable platform, and then they can create a bridge from shallow water to a deeper area,' Su said.
Shugart, the former submariner, said the barges could even potentially drop a ramp across seawalls or other obstacles onto a coastal road, allowing the PLA to send troops and equipment to shore.
He added that the barges also enhance operational speed. 'We've seen them set up and broken down and set up again multiple times within a matter of days,' Shugart said, citing satellite images.
However, due to their size and slow speed, these vessels are highly vulnerable to enemy fire and would likely only be deployed as part of a second wave, following the initial landing forces across the Strait, which is around 80 miles wide at its narrowest point, experts say.
'Before they even think about embarking a landing force and sending troops across the (Taiwan) Strait, they would already make sure that they have seized air, information and naval dominance all the way across the strait,' Shugart said.
The barges 'wouldn't be brought forward until the environment had been made safe for them, just like in World War II D-Day, the US had complete air control and sea control before the landing forces went ashore,' he added.
Collin, the expert at RSIS in Singapore, said the barges are not designed for high intensity warfare at sea.
'They are slow, they are not so well protected on their own, and they require escorts, which must go at the same speed as those barges. And for some of the war fighting assets, speed is the essence,' he said.
Days before the video of the barges surfaced on Chinese social media, the Marine Safety Administration of Guangdong province issued a notice banning ships from entering a long, narrow body of water due to 'maritime tests.' The geo-coordinates of the restricted zone matched the location of the barges confirmed by satellite imagery.
CNN has reached out to the Guangdong government agency for comment.
By March 21, satellite imagery from Maxar Technologies showed that the barges had moved about 15 kilometers south along the coast. The images also captured a roll-on/roll-off (RO-RO) ferry docked beside the third and largest barge, positioned farthest from shore. Days later, a Planet Labs satellite image showed another RO-RO cargo ship approaching the same barge from the opposite side.
According to Shugart, Chinese authorities may be testing the barges' ability to interface with civilian RO-RO vessels, which could significantly boost the PLA's sealift capabilities by enabling the rapid transfer of large numbers of wheeled and tracked vehicles.
Designed to transport large numbers of vehicles to overseas markets, RO-RO ships have proliferated globally, but especially in China in recent years to meet the surging global demand for Chinese electric vehicles. But Chinese military planners and state media have also taken note of their dual-use capabilities to support the PLA's operations.
In a 2021 military drill, China's state broadcaster CCTV praised RO-RO ferries for enabling 'large-scale, full-unit land and sea deployment with immediate unloading and loading.' Footage aired by the broadcaster showed rows of tanks neatly lined up inside such a ferry.
'These barges can significantly improve the PLA capability to deliver logistics following an invasion,' said Dahm, the former US Navy intelligence officer.
But he noted they are only part of Chinese leader Xi Jinping's ambition to modernize the PLA and transform it into a 'world class' military.
American officials believe Xi has instructed the PLA to be ready to invade Taiwan by 2027, though they have stressed that doesn't mean an invasion will occur in 2027.
'In the context of all of the other improvements that we're seeing to PLA capabilities and especially to PLA infrastructure, the barges are just the shiny object that draws attention to the fact that the PLA is making these preparations to be prepared to act on Xi Jinping's orders in the next several years, if called upon to do so,' Dahm said.
CNN's Wayne Chang contributed reporting.

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Multiple immigration sweeps reported across L.A., with a tense standoff downtown
Multiple immigration sweeps reported across L.A., with a tense standoff downtown

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Multiple immigration sweeps reported across L.A., with a tense standoff downtown

In a show of force in the heart of Los Angeles, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents on Friday carried out a series of immigration sweeps, including two downtown that sparked a tense standoff. Videos showed federal agents running after people in the parking lot of the Home Depot in Westlake, not far from downtown Los Angeles. A man recording the video can be heard warning people in Spanish that immigration officials were at the location and to stay away. Another raid occurred at a business in the Garment District near 9th and Towne streets, with agents in riot gear detaining workers at a clothing store as dozens of people began to gather outside. As workers were hauled off in cuffs, throngs of people yelled at the agents and held up cellphones to record them, according to videos of the showdown. One person threw eggs at one of the vehicles as agents pushed members of the public back, the videos showed. 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How Europe could go ‘Mega' by 2027
How Europe could go ‘Mega' by 2027

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How Europe could go ‘Mega' by 2027

Poland's new president is a Trump-inspired nationalist. The government in the Netherlands has just been felled by an anti-migrant firebrand. Right-wing parties are already in government in Hungary and Italy, and in Berlin, the far-Right Alternative for Germany (AfD) is the main opposition after it was endorsed by JD Vance and Elon Musk in the February elections. As Europe begins a cycle of crucial elections over the next two and a half years, the radical insurgent Right has the momentum. By 2027, there could be eight nationalist prime ministers in the 27-member-strong European Union, which has already swung to the Right. Meanwhile, Donald Trump's White House is determined to 'Make Europe Great Again'. Allies in the right places could prove very useful to Mr Trump, who accuses the EU of trying to 'screw' the US on trade and through the regulation of American technology firms. 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Trump says Xi agreed to restart flow of crucial minerals, but analysts say China won't give up its ‘rare earth card'
Trump says Xi agreed to restart flow of crucial minerals, but analysts say China won't give up its ‘rare earth card'

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time42 minutes ago

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Trump says Xi agreed to restart flow of crucial minerals, but analysts say China won't give up its ‘rare earth card'

US President Donald Trump said Chinese leader Xi Jinping has agreed to restart the flow of crucial rare earth materials, after announcing a new round of US-China trade talks will be held in London on Monday. Trump made the comments a day after holding his long-awaited phone call with Xi, during which the two leaders agreed to resume negotiations stalled over mutual accusations of violating the truce reached in Geneva last month. For Washington, a major sticking point has been China's export restrictions on rare earth minerals and magnets, which are essential for everything from cars to fighter jets, and critical to American industries and defense. In the weeks since the fragile detente, Washington has accused Beijing of slow-walking approvals for rare earth exports and reneging on its promise made in Geneva, with Trump expressing increasing urgency to speak to his Chinese counterpart to iron things out. After a 90-minute call on Thursday, Trump said he and Xi had 'straightened out' some points related to rare earth magnets, describing it as 'very complex stuff.' But he did not specify what exactly had been agreed upon. Asked Friday if Xi had agreed to restart the flow of rare earth minerals and magnets, Trump told reporters abroad Air Force One: 'Yes, he did.' He did not further elaborate on how fast that would happen, or the volume of the materials that would be released. The Chinese readout of the call did not mention rare earths. Instead, it quoted Xi as saying that China had 'seriously and earnestly' complied with the trade truce agreement. Asked about it at the Chinese foreign ministry's daily briefing on Friday, a spokesperson sidestepped the question, saying it was a matter for other agencies to address. China, which controls 90% of the global processing of rare earths, imposed export restrictions on some minerals and magnets on April 4 at the height of the tariff war, after Trump slapped 'reciprocal' levies on Chinese goods. The new system does not ban exports outright, but requires government approval for each shipment. Chinese scholars who advise the government suggested on Thursday that Beijing is not ready to give up the powerful leverage bestowed by its dominance on the rare earth supply chain – and may seek to use it to get Washington to ease its own export controls aimed at blocking China's access to advanced US semiconductors and technologies. While American businesses are likely to see more shipments approved in the next couple of weeks, the export licensing regime is here to stay, said Wu Xinbo, director of the Center for American Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai. 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'The issue of US export controls may no longer be an area that is completely non-negotiable in the future,' Cui Fan, an economics professor at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing and advisor to the Chinese Commerce Ministry, wrote in a social media post. Beijing has insisted that its export controls are in line with international practices, non-discriminatory and not targeted at any specific country. Hours before the two leaders jumped on the phone on Thursday, a spokesperson for China's commerce ministry reiterated that stance at a regular news conference, citing the 'clear dual-use attributes' of rare earth materials. Dual-use items refer to those with both civilian and military applications. 'The Chinese government reviews export license applications for dual-use items in accordance with laws and regulations, and for applications that meet the requirements, China will grant approval to promote and facilitate compliant trade,' spokesperson He Yongqian said. The strict licensing system has significantly disrupted the global supplies of these materials and triggered production turmoil across industries in America and Europe, raising alarms among officials and businesses alike. A survey of member companies conducted by the American Chamber of Commerce in China late week found that, among those affected by rare earth export controls, 75% say their stock would run out within three months. CNN's Kit Maher contributed to reporting.

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