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2 December 2025

Space-Guided Supremacy: How China’s Satellite Systems Strengthen its Missile and Hypersonic Forces

Tahir Azad 

A decade ago, talk of “space dominance” meant the United States and, increasingly, Russia. The strategic picture is now clearly three-polar, and in many mission areas, it’s even two-polar. The U.S. and China are now in a fast-paced race to control the high ground of orbit. Beijing’s growing satellite networks, which include navigation, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR), communications, and missile early warning, are creating a “kill web” in space that makes it easier for the PLA’s missile and hypersonic forces to find and shoot down targets.

Beijing views space integration as the key to achieving information dominance and missile precision, giving it a decisive edge in both deterrence and strike capability. This matters because space superiority now underpins strategic stability, early warning, and real-time targeting, allowing China to combine cyber, electronic, and kinetic domains into a unified warfare network. The United States increasingly fears that China’s space-enabled precision warfare could neutralize traditional U.S. advantages in command, control, communications, intelligence, and missile defense. Top officials in the U.S. Space Force have warned about a “mind-boggling” Chinese military buildup that could upset the balance of deterrence and shorten decision-making times in a crisis.

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