Close Menu
Crazy Peks NewsCrazy Peks News
  • Home
  • America
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • Business & Money
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Privacy Policy
  • Get In Touch
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • daily volume on Polymarket’s U.S. platform increased from around $50 million in mid-May to more than $200 million as of June 20 (Davis Giangiulio/CNBC)
  • Summer box office could generate first $10 billion since pandemic
  • Streaming services must comply with a California law that prohibits showing ads at a louder volume than the content being watched starting July 1, but its implementation is unclear (Scharon Harding/Ars Technica)
  • A look at advanced chip packaging, now more dependent than ever on TSMC and its partners in Taiwan, and efforts to solve this bottleneck in the United States (Don Clark/New York Times)
  • Pakistan wants the world to see it as a peacemaker. I want him to find my father. – The diplomat
  • Insurance technology startup Corgi denies accusations that it used Papermark’s open source software code to develop its software and present it as its own (Julie Bort/TechCrunch)
  • Border towns light up at night as North Korea goes solar – Radio Free Asia
  • Anthropic says the US government is authorizing the redeployment of Mythos 5 to critical infrastructure operators and is working to restore general access to Fable 5 (@anthropicai)
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Crazy Peks NewsCrazy Peks News
Demo
  • America
  • Asia

    Pakistan wants the world to see it as a peacemaker. I want him to find my father. – The diplomat

    June 27, 2026

    Border towns light up at night as North Korea goes solar – Radio Free Asia

    June 27, 2026

    What’s next? – The diplomat

    June 26, 2026

    Why India’s foreign minister visited Mongolia – The Diplomat

    June 26, 2026

    Has China really entered the three-carrier era? – The diplomat

    June 26, 2026
  • Europe
  • Business & Money

    Summer box office could generate first $10 billion since pandemic

    June 27, 2026

    Walmart heir Lukas Walton buys minority stake in Chicago Bulls

    June 26, 2026

    How Nike, Levi’s and Taco Bell win

    June 26, 2026

    Rising Memory Chip Costs Put Pressure on Electronics Retailers

    June 26, 2026

    Estrogen patches in short supply as women seek menopause support

    June 26, 2026
  • Politics

    Evangelical Christians humiliated as Trump falls asleep on them

    June 26, 2026

    President Mike Johnson admits he’s running a protection racket for Trump

    June 26, 2026

    Senate Democrats launch preemptive strike to stop Trump from intervening in midterms

    June 25, 2026

    Trump threatens to block Republicans’ midterms if they don’t pass SAVE Act

    June 24, 2026

    Top House Democrat suggests Trump may have terminal illness

    June 24, 2026
  • Technology

    daily volume on Polymarket’s U.S. platform increased from around $50 million in mid-May to more than $200 million as of June 20 (Davis Giangiulio/CNBC)

    June 27, 2026

    Streaming services must comply with a California law that prohibits showing ads at a louder volume than the content being watched starting July 1, but its implementation is unclear (Scharon Harding/Ars Technica)

    June 27, 2026

    A look at advanced chip packaging, now more dependent than ever on TSMC and its partners in Taiwan, and efforts to solve this bottleneck in the United States (Don Clark/New York Times)

    June 27, 2026

    Insurance technology startup Corgi denies accusations that it used Papermark’s open source software code to develop its software and present it as its own (Julie Bort/TechCrunch)

    June 27, 2026

    Anthropic says the US government is authorizing the redeployment of Mythos 5 to critical infrastructure operators and is working to restore general access to Fable 5 (@anthropicai)

    June 27, 2026
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Crazy Peks NewsCrazy Peks News
Home » Has China really entered the three-carrier era? – The diplomat
Asia

Has China really entered the three-carrier era? – The diplomat

Frank M. EverettBy Frank M. EverettJune 26, 2026No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


On June 23, China’s third aircraft carrier, Fujian, transited the Taiwan Strait. According to an official statementTaiwan’s Ministry of National Defense confirmed that the aircraft carrier had crossed the strait, prompting the Taiwanese military to activate “its joint intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance measures to closely monitor” the ship’s movements.

The ministry also released a black-and-white aerial image of Fujian, taken from high altitude. Notably, no carrier-based aircraft was visible on the flight deck, although the ministry did not disclose the precise time or location where the photo was taken.

This image, released by Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense on June 23, 2026, shows the Chinese aircraft carrier Fujian during a transit through the Taiwan Strait.

At first glance, this transit may appear to be part of routine training for China’s new aircraft carrier. But its strategic importance should not be underestimated. The passage through Fujian through one of Asia’s most sensitive waterways is part of a broader pattern of Chinese military and maritime law enforcement activities around Taiwan. Beijing’s Ministry of National Defense described the operation as routine training and said similar activities would continue in the future.

Foreign media have largely interpreted the transit in the context of Taiwan’s recent rapid combat readiness exercises and China’s increasing use of coast guard and maritime security vessels east of Taiwan. Taken together, these developments suggest that Beijing is experimenting with a multi-layered pressure campaign, combining naval and air power, coast guard control, and aircraft carrier training to test Taiwan’s responses in multiple domains.

However, the transit must also be assessed in light of the current status of the People’s Liberation Army Navy’s (PLAN) three-carrier force. Liaoning recently returned to its home port of Qingdao after more than 40 days of operations in the Western Pacific. Fujian’s current southward movement suggests that its next phase of training could focus on the South China Sea, potentially involving coordination with Shandong’s carrier air units or operating within the broader framework of China’s southern maritime strategy.

Yet the current size and maturity of China’s air force remains insufficient to fully support three operational carriers at the same time. Although China now has three aircraft carriers, its carrier-based aircraft, pilots, deck crew and maintenance capacity do not yet appear sufficient to meet the full operational requirements of a three-carrier navy.

This limitation is closely related to the different launch and recovery systems used by Chinese carriers. The PLA has long emphasized a “small steps, rapid” approach to naval modernization, using successive platforms to test and integrate new technologies. This approach enabled rapid technological progress, but it also gave rise to two distinct transport aviation systems. Liaoning and Shandong rely on ski jump launching systems, while Fujian is equipped with an electromagnetic aircraft launching system. As a result, China’s fleet of three aircraft carriers is not just three hulls. This requires the development and management of two different transport aviation ecosystems.

China’s industrial capacity is unlikely to be the main bottleneck; the Chinese navy can almost certainly build additional aircraft. The more difficult question is whether it has enough qualified carrier pilots and flight deck personnel capable of operating under two different launch and recovery systems.

Transport aviation is not simply an extension of land-based air operations. Pilots must master night operations, recoveries in bad weather, high-cadence launch and recovery cycles, complex electromagnetic environments, and the unique requirements of operating from a mobile deck at sea. The transition from ski jump operations to electromagnetic catapult operations adds another layer of complexity. Although the commissioning and testing of the Fujian marks a new milestone in Chinese aviation, it does not mean that the PLAN immediately acquired a mature combat capability.

If the PLAN were to attempt simultaneous full-deck deployments of all three carriers, the pressure would be considerable. If Fujian were to carry around 40 aircraft, Liaoning and Shandong would each also need their own air wings. In addition, the Navy would need backup aircraft, training aircraft, maintenance reserves, replacements for operational losses, and land-based training units. Concretely, China would need around 100 planes capable of transporting aircraft, as well as a corresponding pool of pilots, deck crew, maintainers and logistics personnel.

Under these conditions, Fujian could actually intensify the developmental pressure created by the coexistence of old and new systems. Liaoning and Shandong remain focused on the J-15 system, while Fujian is expected to integrate aircraft such as the J-15T, J-35, KJ-600 and J-15D. This will complicate training, maintenance, munitions support, avionics integration, cockpit procedures and pilot conversion.

Fujian’s southward movement also highlights the continued importance of the South China Sea in China’s maritime strategy. For Beijing, the South China Sea is not simply a sovereignty dispute; it is also a training ground for blue water naval operations. By moving Fujian south, the PLAN appears to shift the carrier’s training environment from near-shore waters to the semi-operational environment of the South China Sea. There, the carrier can take advantage of the supporting infrastructure in Sanya, Hainan Island, while putting pressure on the Philippines and U.S. military activities in the region.

The timing is also important: Fujian’s move came as Liaoning was returning to port, suggesting that China may gradually seek to establish a training and deployment circuit linking the Taiwan Strait, the South China Sea and the Western Pacific.

At the same time, China still does not have the capacity to support full operations on three aircraft carriers. The Shandong has reportedly been in a dry dock capable of carrying an aircraft carrier at the Yulin Naval Base in Sanya since late January 2026. Media reported in February that China was conducting its first aircraft carrier maintenance operation at Yulin, using dry dock facilities developed after 2022 to support repairs and maintenance of aircraft carriers. This suggests that the Shandong is undergoing a significant maintenance period rather than a short stopover. Open source satellite observers also noted in early May that images from April 26 still showed the Shandong in dry dock, more than three months after it entered the facility on January 20.

This trend suggests a probable division of labor between the three Chinese carriers. Liaoning is used for long-range power projection and operational signaling; Fujian remains in testing and training as China’s first electromagnetic catapult carrier; and Shandong is undergoing major maintenance work. In other words, China may have entered the era of three aircraft carriers, but it has not yet entered the era of three fully mature air wings and three complete maintenance and logistics systems operating simultaneously.

The strategic implication of transiting the Taiwan Strait through Fujian is therefore twofold. On the one hand, it demonstrates China’s continued determination to normalize aircraft carrier operations in politically sensitive waters and integrate aircraft carriers into its broader pressure campaign against Taiwan. On the other hand, it also reveals the constraints on the expansion of Chinese carriers.

The PLAN is evolving rapidly, but it is still learning how to support large-scale transport aviation. The key question is not simply whether Fujian can sail across the Taiwan Strait, but whether China can generate enough aircraft, pilots, deck crews, and maintenance capacity to support two or more carrier strike groups in continued, credible operations.

For Taiwan and the wider Indo-Pacific region, this means that Fujian should not be seen as a symbolic platform. Its transit reflects the direction of China’s naval modernization and its desire to connect the Taiwan Strait, the South China Sea and the Western Pacific into a single operational theater. But this event must also be interpreted with caution. The Chinese naval air force is becoming more and more efficient, but it remains in transition. Beijing has entered the three-carrier era, but not yet the era of fully mature three-carrier operations.

China Diplomat entered era threecarrier
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
Frank M. Everett

Related Posts

Pakistan wants the world to see it as a peacemaker. I want him to find my father. – The diplomat

June 27, 2026

Border towns light up at night as North Korea goes solar – Radio Free Asia

June 27, 2026

What’s next? – The diplomat

June 26, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

© 2026 Crazy Peks News | All rights reserved.
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Get In Touch

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.