BEIJING (Realist English). Chinese scientists say they have deployed a working prototype of a global missile defence system capable of tracking a thousand incoming threats at once, in what they describe as the first step toward worldwide coverage.
The “distributed early warning detection big data platform,” unveiled by project developers, integrates information from diverse sensors in space, at sea, in the air and on the ground. It can identify and analyse missile launches in real time, determining trajectories, weapon types and distinguishing between genuine warheads and decoys to support interception systems.
According to the team, the platform represents a major advance in data processing, able to combine information from different military platforms supplied by various contractors, deployed in multiple regions and built in different eras. It can transmit and analyse huge volumes of information at high speed across bandwidth-limited military networks, even under interference or disruption.
Developers claim it is the first missile defence system designed to provide planet-wide coverage. By comparison, the US system remains divided into regional segments.
In May, US President Donald Trump unveiled his proposed “Golden Dome” initiative, intended to overcome geographical barriers and create a global defence network. But Washington has yet to establish a fundamental architecture for the project. The Pentagon and defence contractors have not agreed on a workable model for managing data flows or coordinating implementation.
Chinese state media framed the new prototype as evidence of Beijing’s ability to match and even outpace Washington in strategic defence innovation, contrasting it with what officials call the US “obsession with absolute security.”














