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HQ-29 Missile Defense System

HQ-29 Missile Defense System
  • Maximum Range 400–600 km
  • Maximum Altitude 150+ km (exo-atmospheric)
  • Radar Detection Range Not disclosed / Estimated long-range
  • Missile Speed Estimated Mach 5+

Full Specifications

1. General Information

System Name HQ-29
Manufacturer CASIC (China Aerospace Science & Industry Corp.)
Country of Origin China
Type / Role Mid-Course Anti-Ballistic Missile / ASAT System
In Service Limited Early Service (From 2025)
Year Introduced 2025 (official unveiling)
Unit Cost Not disclosed / Classified

2. Performance & Capabilities

Maximum Engagement Range 400–600 km
Maximum Engagement Altitude 150+ km (Exo-atmospheric / Space Layer)
Target Types Ballistic Missiles, Re-entry Vehicles, LEO Satellites
Interception Probability Classified / Not publicly confirmed
Reaction Time Not disclosed
Radar Detection Range Estimated long-range, classified

3. Missile Specifications

Missile Type Solid-Fueled Kinetic Interceptor
Missile Length ~7.5 m
Missile Weight Not disclosed
Warhead Type Kinetic Hit-to-Kill Vehicle (Non-Explosive)
Warhead Weight Not disclosed
Speed Estimated Mach 5+

4. Radar & Fire Control

Radar Type Classified / Strategic BMD Radar
Radar Name Not publicly disclosed
Detection Range Not publicly disclosed
Tracking Capacity Not publicly disclosed
Guidance System Inertial + Active Radar Homing + IR Seeker + Micro-Thrusters
Fire Control System Integrated Strategic Air & Missile Defense Network

5. Launcher & Mobility

Launcher Type 6×6 or 8×8 Mobile TEL
No. of Missiles per Launcher 2 per TEL
Reload Time Not disclosed / Estimated moderate
Mobility Platform Heavy-duty military wheeled TEL
Crew Required Not disclosed

6. Command & Control

C2 System Integrated National BMD Battle Network
Connectivity Long-range radar, satellite links, EW sensors
Network Capability Yes – Multi-layer Integration
Operation Mode Autonomous / Networked / Command-Cued

7. Operational Use

Primary Operator China (PLA Rocket Force / Air Force)
Combat Proven No (New System)
Conflict History None
Notable Feature Potential Anti-Satellite (ASAT) Role

Our Rating

The overall rating is based on review by our experts

8.3
  • Technology 8 / 10
  • Performance 9 / 10
  • Operational Flexibility 8 / 10
  • Combat Effectiveness 8 / 10

PROS

  1. Dual-role: intercepts ballistic missiles and potentially satellites (ASAT capability).
  2. Exo-atmospheric mid-course interception protects well before re‑entry, improving defense buffer.
  3. Mobile TEL deployment enables flexible deployment and repositioning.
  4. Advanced hit-to-kill guidance with micro‑thrusters offers high interception precision.
  5. Enhances layered missile defense, plugging a gap between terminal SAMs and strategic interceptors.

CONS

  1. Limited public data — many specifications unconfirmed or based on external estimates.
  2. Mobility + large missile canisters may hamper stealth/deployment concealment.
  3. Likely expensive per missile and costly to maintain networked radar + sensor infrastructure.
  4. Unknown reliability, given limited open test or combat-proven record.
  5. Potential escalation risk — ASAT capability could draw international political backlash.

HQ-29 Advanced Chinese Missile Defense System

The HQ-29 represents a significant leap in China’s missile defense architecture — a mobile, high‑altitude interceptor designed to neutralize ballistic missiles in mid‑course flight, and even target low‑Earth orbit satellites. Publicly unveiled during the 3 September 2025 Victory Day parade, HQ-29 has sparked global interest for bridging atmospheric air defense and space‑age threat interception.

Manufacturer, Origin & Purpose

Developed under the auspices of CASIC (China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation), HQ-29 emerges from years of classified R&D aimed at building a comprehensive, multi-layered ballistic missile defense (BMD) shield. Its purpose: to intercept short‑, intermediate‑, or even intercontinental ballistic missiles during their mid-course exo‑atmospheric phase — and potentially to deny adversary satellites in low Earth orbit (LEO).

Capabilities & Technology

HQ-29 is deployed via a six-axle transporter‑erector‑launcher (TEL), carrying two vertical canisters — each housing a solid-fueled, high-velocity interceptor missile. The missiles are estimated at roughly 7.5 m length with ~0.5 m diameter per launcher configuration.

Once launched, the interceptor uses a “hit-to-kill” kinetic kill vehicle. Its guidance combines inertial navigation, active radar homing, and infrared terminal seekers. For final-phase precision, the missile’s nose reportedly carries dozens of cold-gas micro-thrusters arranged hemispherically to permit fine, multi-axis trajectory adjustments.

Analysts estimate an operational range between 400–600 km, with probable engagement altitudes exceeding 150 km — sufficient to strike ballistic re‑entry vehicles in mid-course or satellites in low orbit.

Integrated into China’s broader Integrated Air and Missile Defense (IAMD) network, HQ-29 can receive early warning data from ground‑based radars and space sensors, allowing strategic deployment across vast territories.

Operational Use & Strategic Role

HQ-29 fills a critical mid‑tier in China’s layered BMD architecture — sitting above short‑range and terminal-defense systems (like HQ-9 variants) and below dedicated exo‑atmospheric interceptors or orbital weapons.

In regional or high-threat theaters, it can shield strategic infrastructure, military bases, or population centers against medium- to long-range ballistic missile attacks. In a broader strategic sense, its potential anti-satellite (ASAT) capability represents a deterrent against adversary space‑based reconnaissance and strike assets.

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