China · Taiwan · N. Korea
8 intel briefs for this theater
◈ Theater Assessment
China's undersea drone posture in Southeast Asia remains the most operationally significant near-term concern, with the Indonesian recovery of a suspected PLA submersible drone continuing to anchor regional security discourse and drawing sustained analytical attention to Beijing's subsurface ISR campaign across contested maritime zones. No new reporting in the current window materially alters the prior assessment: China continues to operate across three simultaneous drone vectors — undersea reconnaissance, Taiwan Strait counter-UAS doctrine, and Russian electronics supply — with each line of effort reinforcing a broader posture of deniable, multi-domain pressure. The Indonesian incident is now generating secondary effects, accelerating regional debate on undersea domain awareness investment among Southeast Asian states, which itself reflects the strategic signaling value Beijing extracts from such operations.
◈ Key Developments
◈ Operational Trend
China's drone posture continues its trajectory from industrial and export dominance toward active multi-domain deployment, with the undersea ISR dimension now generating measurable second-order effects in the form of accelerated regional counter-drone investment — an outcome that confirms PLA operational presence is influencing adversary behavior, not merely signaling intent.
China’s Silent Hunter directed-energy air defence system has reportedly been sighted in Abu Dhabi Airport in the United Arab Emirates. The system made its first
A suspected Chinese underwater drone hauled out of Indonesian waters this month has sharpened global focus on a security race that analysts say has been years in the making across South and Southeast Asia: undersea surveillance. The torpedo-shaped device was found near the Lombok Strait, one of the few deepwater channels through which submarines can transit submerged between the Pacific and Indian oceans and a passage closely watched by the United States and Australia. Beijing said it did not...
A recording of the meeting, published by Ukrainian prankster Yevgen Volnov, captures officials discussing supply chains for unmanned aerial vehicles.
A vehicle that can zap energy into a fleet of drones, allowing them to fly indefinitely, is getting closer to becoming a battlefield reality. Scientists in China have demonstrated a wireless power transmission system that uses a ground-based microwave emitter to beam energy to an antenna array mounted on the aircraft’s underside. Importantly, they were able to do this while both the drone and charging system were in motion. Some analysts have likened the concept to a “land-based aircraft...
"Russian forces are equipping Shahed drones with passive radar homing." This claim made a splash in Ukrainian media…
While Iranian Shahed-136 suicide drones recently drew attention for destroying key US radars and striking targets as far away as Cyprus in the US-Israel war on Iran, their distant “cousins” in China may pose an even higher risk in a future conflict. China’s ASN-301 shares the Iranian drone’s aerodynamic delta-wing design that is rooted in a common technological origin. The Chinese drone and its variants have evolved into either a highly sophisticated SEAD (suppression of enemy air defences)...
The 18-ton vehicle, named the MK1, was developed in less than a year and is envisioned as a multirole platform incorporating lessons from the Ukraine war.
At first glance, placing Army modernization of small unmanned aircraft systems—sUAS—under the leadership of the aviation branch seems reasonable. After all, sUAS fly and share battlefield airspace with crewed aircraft, […] The post Who Owns the Drones? Why Modernization of Army Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems Should Be a Maneuver Responsibility first appeared on Modern War Institute .