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posted ago by aslan_is_0n_the_m0ve ago by aslan_is_0n_the_m0ve +22 / -0

https://asiatimes.com/2026/01/chinas-drone-carriers-hide-in-plain-sight-among-merchant-ships/

https://maritime-executive.com/article/chinese-container-ship-gets-mobile-launch-track-for-drone-fighters

China’s drone carriers hide in plain sight among merchant ships

January 6, 2026

Weaponized merchant ships could turn global trade routes into a gray-zone battlefield, upending deterrence and maritime security

What if China’s next aircraft carrier doesn’t look like a warship at all -- but like an ordinary cargo vessel quietly turning global trade routes into launchpads for drone warfare?

This month, multiple media outlets reported that China appears to be testing a new way to rapidly convert civilian cargo ships into drone-launch platforms, according to recent imagery and analysis.

Photos emerging since late December show a Chinese medium cargo vessel, Zhongda 79, reconfigured to carry a modular, truck-mounted electromagnetic catapult system capable of launching large fixed-wing combat drones, with the activity centered at Shanghai’s Hudong-Zhonghua shipyard.

The system consists of multiple heavy trucks locked together to form a scalable launch track, potentially allowing drones weighing up to two tons to be launched without a traditional runway, either from land or from flat-decked merchant ships.

The concept, if operational, could enable the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) to disperse airpower across China’s vast commercial fleet, complicating adversaries’ targeting and expanding drone reach in scenarios ranging from the Taiwan Strait to the Pacific island chains.

The same vessel had earlier been seen carrying containerized missile launchers, radars and close-in weapon systems (CIWS), suggesting a broader experiment with modular, container-based naval warfare.

However, key questions remain over the system’s maturity, including its stability at sea, power demands and the apparent lack of a recovery mechanism for launched drones, raising the possibility that the ship is intended for one-way strike missions or demonstrations rather than sustained carrier-style operations.

China’s large merchant fleet -- at around 9,000 ships – provides it a functionally unlimited supply of potential ships for conversion into ad-hoc combatants.

These ships could be indistinguishable from civilian ships plying critical sea lanes of communication from Kaohsiung in Taiwan to Long Beach in California, presenting a “Trojan horse” dilemma to adversaries.

From a cost perspective, a containerized, modular weapons system could give a commercial ship worth US$80-120 million the firepower of a $2 billion destroyer, with more shooters possibly being more decisive than fewer fast shooters.

With its modular truck-mounted electromagnetic catapult, China may have turned the traditional aircraft carrier concept on its head.

Instead of concentrating so much capability into a few expensive and potentially vulnerable warships, containerized drone launchers enable distributed drone-centric air operations that greatly enhance tactical reach and agility.

Hidden aboard civilian ships, hundreds of containerized missiles or drones could be used in a surprise initial attack to catch adversaries off guard and destroy key targets.

In the case of Taiwan, China could covertly arm a significant number of its merchant vessels with containerized drones or missiles, reducing the tell-tale signs of a military buildup to take Taiwan.

In the event of an invasion, these ships could contribute to an initial decapitation strike against Taiwan’s political and military leadership and key energy infrastructure.

China may employ cruise and ballistic missiles alongside drones to minimize losses, reserving manned aircraft for later use to secure control over Taiwanese airspace or to deter US and allied intervention.

Given China’s global merchant fleet, containerized missile and drone launchers could disperse lethality throughout the Indo-Pacific and complicate targeting.

This approach would also reduce China’s need for overseas military bases, as it operates or is a stakeholder in multiple Pacific port projects that could accommodate merchant ships armed with containerized weapons and ease the burden on logistics by using ubiquitous civilian container handling equipment.

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