China launches third aircraft carrier as Xi pushes military modernization against US influence

China commissions its third aircraft carrier Fujian, marking a major step in military modernization and power projection across the Indo-Pacific region.


China launches third aircraft carrier as Xi pushes military modernization against US influence
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China formally brought its next-generation aircraft carrier, the Fujian, into active service Wednesday - a milestone in its drive to transform the People's Liberation Army Navy into a force capable of projecting power far beyond Asia's shores.

China's state media said the Fujian will continue sea trials and flight tests before becoming fully combat-ready, but its commissioning signals Beijing's growing confidence in operating larger, more complex warships. The 80,000-ton vessel is equipped with electromagnetic catapults that can launch heavier aircraft, including advanced J-35 stealth fighters, giving it longer range and greater strike capacity than China's two previous carriers, the Liaoning and the Shandong.

The Fujian's launch also reignited debate over the use of electromagnetic catapults - a technology Beijing has embraced and one that President Donald Trump has publicly criticized as unreliable.

Speaking aboard the aircraft carrier USS George Washington while visiting sailors in Japan, Trump announced his intention to sign an executive order directing the United States Navy to revert to steam-powered catapults and hydraulic elevators on new carriers, rejecting the modern electromagnetic system (EMALS) as too costly, unreliable and difficult to repair.

"They're spending billions to build stupid electric. And the problem is, when it breaks, you have to send it up to MIT.... The steam - you can fix it with a hammer and a blowtorch. And it works just as well, if not better," Trump said.

He told the assembled sailors: "When we build aircraft carriers, it's steam for the catapults, and it's hydraulic for the elevators. We'll never have a problem."

News of the Fujian's commissioning prompted immediate concern in Japan, which has been expanding its own defense capabilities in response to China's growing military power. Minoru Kihara, a former defense minister who now serves as chief cabinet secretary under Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, said the launch showed that Beijing is "extensively and rapidly strengthening its military power without transparency."

Kihara told reporters that Japan believes China is working to extend its naval and air operations farther from its shores and warned that Tokyo will "calmly but decisively respond" to any potential threats.

The United States maintains a carrier strike group presence in the western Pacific and conducts regular freedom-of-navigation operations near disputed islands to counter China's territorial assertions.

A senior War Department official told Fox News Digital this week: "China's military buildup sends a signal to all that Beijing intends to use military force to alter the balance of power in the Indo-Pacific."

"We have more meetings on that coming soon. God bless both China and the USA!" Hegseth wrote in a post on X after the meeting.

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