Chinese new DF-27 hypersonic missile launchers spotted in urban area

Key Points
  • Chinese social media footage shows multiple suspected DF-27 hypersonic missile launchers moving in convoy through a Chinese urban area, location unconfirmed.
  • The Pentagon's 2025 China military report confirmed the DF-27 is fielded with a 5,000 to 8,000 km range and an anti-ship ballistic missile variant.

Videos and images circulating on the Chinese social media platform Weibo show a convoy of multiple mobile missile launchers traveling through what appears to be a Chinese city, with open-source analysts identifying the vehicles as probable transporter-erector-launchers associated with the DF-27 anti-ship ballistic missile system fitted with a hypersonic glide vehicle.

The footage, captured by bystanders along a public roadway, shows the large military vehicles moving in convoy formation through an urban street, visible alongside ordinary civilian traffic and standard city infrastructure including traffic signals and road barriers. The location and date of the convoy movement have not been officially confirmed by Chinese authorities.

The Pentagon’s 2025 annual report to Congress on military and security developments involving China publicly confirmed for the first time that Beijing has fielded the DF-27 as a conventional intercontinental ballistic missile, with an estimated range of 5,000 to 8,000 kilometers, and identified an anti-ship ballistic missile variant. That range places it at the low end of the ICBM class, making it, by Pentagon assessment, the first operational, conventionally-armed ICBM fielded by any nation. The sighting of launchers consistent with this system moving through a populated Chinese city underlines that the DF-27 is not a developmental program — it is deployed hardware moving through the operational force.

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What makes the DF-27 particularly significant is the combination of range and maneuverability that its hypersonic glide vehicle delivers. The missile uses solid propellant and is configured to carry conventional, nuclear, or hypersonic warheads, integrated with a hypersonic glide vehicle that enables maneuverability during flight, with variants produced for both land-attack and anti-ship missions. A hypersonic glide vehicle, unlike a traditional ballistic missile reentry body, does not follow a predictable arc back to Earth. Instead, it separates from the booster at high altitude and then glides at hypersonic speed — above Mach 5 — while maneuvering, making interception by existing missile defense systems dramatically more difficult.

(Screengrab from video posted to social media)

The DF-27 marks the fourth anti-ship ballistic missile in China’s inventory, joining the DF-26 intermediate-range ballistic missile, the YJ-17 hypersonic glide vehicle-fitted ballistic missile, and the DF-21D medium-range ballistic missile. Each successive system in that family has pushed the engagement range further across the Pacific. The DF-21D can threaten naval vessels in the western Pacific. The DF-26 extended that threat envelope toward Guam in the mid-Pacific. The DF-27, with its 8,000-kilometer maximum stated range, extends coverage substantially further — far deeper across the ocean and toward the U.S. West Coast.

The DF-27 is assessed as a solid-fueled, road-mobile system launched from a transporter-erector-launcher, a configuration that enhances survivability through mobility and complicates pre-emptive targeting. That is precisely what the Weibo footage illustrates. A road-mobile missile system can disperse across a country’s highway and rail network, relocate on short notice, and present no fixed target for adversary strike planners to hold at risk. The convoy shown in the social media video — multiple large TEL vehicles moving in formation through a city — is consistent with routine repositioning exercises that keep mobile missile forces unpredictable and survivable.

The Pentagon’s 2025 report assessed that China has the world’s leading hypersonic missile arsenal and continued to advance the development of both conventional and nuclear-armed hypersonic missile technologies throughout the past year. China has also created, by the same assessment, the world’s largest ground-launched ballistic and cruise missile inventory in the intermediate range class. The DF-27 sits atop that already formidable architecture as its longest-reaching conventional strike weapon.

What can be said with confidence is that the DF-27 is fielded, mobile, and visible — a combination that sends an unmistakable signal about the trajectory of China’s long-range conventional strike capability and the expanding threat envelope it presents to U.S. and allied naval forces operating across the Indo-Pacific.

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