China’s Military Might: Built on a Foundation of Stolen Secrets from the US and Russia – Whatfinger News' Choice Clips
Whatfinger News' Choice Clips

China’s Military Might: Built on a Foundation of Stolen Secrets from the US and Russia

J20, also known as Mighty Dragon, is a twinjet all-weather stealth 5th-generation fighter aircraft developed by China’s Chengdu Aerospace Corporation for the PLA Air Force.

The Chengdu J-20 Mighty Dragon, China’s flagship fifth-generation stealth fighter, has been hailed by Beijing as a symbol of its burgeoning technological prowess. Described in a recent article as “stealthy, advanced, controversial,” the jet boasts impressive capabilities like supercruise speeds, advanced avionics, and a weapons bay for long-range missiles. Yet, beneath the veneer of innovation lies a darker truth: The J-20’s design bears uncanny resemblances to American and Russian stealth fighters, fueling allegations that China’s rapid military modernization is less about homegrown genius and more about systematic theft. As Russian President Vladimir Putin reportedly remarked, “They are very good at copying”—a sentiment echoing Moscow’s growing frustration with Beijing’s espionage tactics.

This pattern extends far beyond the J-20, permeating China’s entire arsenal, from aircraft and missiles to nuclear weapons and submarines. Through cyber hacks, human spies, and reverse-engineering, China has pilfered critical technologies from the United States and Russia, accelerating its rise as a global power while undermining the innovators it copies. The J-20 itself exemplifies this kleptocratic approach to military development. Unveiled in 2011 and entering service in 2017, the fighter incorporates design elements strikingly similar to the U.S. Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor and F-35 Lightning II, including diverterless supersonic inlets, sensor placements, and stealth shaping. These parallels aren’t coincidental. In 2016, Chinese national Su Bin pleaded guilty to orchestrating a multiyear cyber espionage campaign that stole sensitive F-22 and F-35 blueprints, funneling them to the People’s Liberation Army (PLA).

Whatfinger Military News Homepage – CLICK HERE

Su, working with hackers, breached U.S. defense contractors’ networks, extracting gigabytes of data on stealth coatings, engine designs, and avionics. This theft shaved years off China’s development timeline, allowing the J-20 to evolve from prototypes with questionable stealth to a platform now deploying with upgraded WS-15 engines. But the J-20’s DNA isn’t solely American; it also draws from Russian roots. The jet’s overall delta-wing and canard configuration mirrors the defunct Mikoyan MiG 1.44, a Soviet-era stealth prototype from the 1990s. Russian officials have accused China of acquiring MiG 1.44 blueprints through illicit means, possibly bribery or cyber intrusions. Analyst Reuben Johnson reported in 2010 that Chinese agents obtained tail section technology from the MiG program, blending it with U.S. elements to create a hybrid fighter.
This fusion highlights China’s modus operandi: Steal from multiple sources, iterate, and claim originality. Aviation theft extends to other platforms. The Shenyang J-11, China’s frontline fighter, is a near-exact clone of Russia’s Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker. In the 1990s, China licensed production of 200 Su-27s but violated the agreement by reverse-engineering the jet, producing unauthorized copies as the J-11B with indigenous avionics. Similarly, the carrier-based J-15 Flying Shark is a bootleg version of the Su-33, acquired after China bought a prototype from Ukraine and dissected it. Russia’s frustration boiled over in 2019 when Deputy Prime Minister Yuri Borisov lamented over 500 cases of Chinese intellectual property theft in the past 17 years, including Sukhoi planes and aircraft engines. Even China’s Y-20 strategic airlifter apes the U.S. Boeing C-17 Globemaster, with identical tail designs and cargo capabilities, likely informed by hacked blueprints.
China is already testing AI-powered robots and drones in live-fire drills. Next: battlefield deployment.

Drones and unmanned systems reveal the same pattern. The Cai Hong-4 (CH-4) Rainbow drone mirrors the U.S. MQ-9 Reaper, down to sensor placements and munitions hardpoints. Exported to over a dozen countries, the CH-4 underscores how stolen tech not only bolsters the PLA but also generates revenue for Beijing. In 2018, Chinese hackers breached a U.S. Navy contractor, stealing 614 gigabytes of data on submarine sensors, weapons, and the Sea Dragon project—a supersonic anti-ship missile program. This haul included designs for advanced torpedoes and electronic warfare systems, directly feeding China’s Type 093 submarines and anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) strategies. Missile technology theft is equally rampant. China’s HQ-9 surface-to-air missile system is a doppelganger of Russia’s S-300, acquired legally at first but then cloned en masse, violating export agreements. More alarmingly, U.S. intelligence reports China pilfered designs for advanced systems like the Patriot PAC-3, THAAD, and Aegis ballistic missile defenses through a 2013 hack on the Defense Science Board.

Hypersonic weapons, where China claims leadership with the DF-17 glide vehicle, may owe their speed to stolen U.S. and Russian data. While Beijing denies it, experts note similarities to Russia’s Avangard, and former President Trump accused both nations of stealing U.S. hypersonic tech. Nuclear espionage forms the most egregious chapter. In the 1990s, China stole U.S. designs for the W-88 warhead—a compact thermonuclear device used on Trident missiles—through spies like Wen Ho Lee at Los Alamos National Laboratory. A 1999 congressional report confirmed China obtained secrets on multiple reentry vehicles, neutron bombs, and weaponization features, accelerating its ICBM program by decades. Russia hasn’t been spared; China has targeted S-400 and S-500 air defense systems via cyberattacks, despite purchasing the S-400 legally. Over 20 years, at least 21 espionage incidents hit Russia’s defense sector, focusing on aerospace.
China unveils futuristic military gear: A soldier wears a tactical exoskeleton used by humans and robots—one unit equals a full squad.

China’s methods are sophisticated and multifaceted. Cyber operations, like the 2010 “Operation Aurora” that hit Google and defense firms, extract source code and blueprints. Human intelligence involves recruiting insiders; cases include Hao Zhang, convicted in 2020 for stealing semiconductor tech, and four PLA-linked nationals charged with visa fraud in the same year. Industrial espionage targets dual-use tech, as seen in the 2016 charging of China General Nuclear Power Group for nuclear secrets. Even joint ventures turn sour: Russia sold engines and jets, only for China to copy them, reducing imports by 40% as it builds self-sufficiency. The implications are profound. By stealing rather than innovating, China avoids the costs and risks of R&D, fielding weapons faster and cheaper. This erodes U.S. and Russian technological edges, heightens global tensions, and fuels an arms race. As Putin implied, China’s copying prowess threatens alliances; Moscow now depends on Beijing for components amid Ukraine sanctions, reversing the dynamic. For the U.S., the economic toll runs into billions, with national security compromised—witness the J-20’s potential to challenge F-35 dominance in the Pacific.

Ultimately, China’s military isn’t a testament to ingenuity but to unchecked ambition. As long as espionage goes unpunished, the theft will continue, reshaping the balance of power. The West and Russia must bolster defenses, from cybersecurity to export controls, to stem the flow of secrets. Otherwise, the next “advanced” Chinese weapon will just be yesterday’s American or Russian breakthrough, repackaged in red.  President Trump has pledged to stop Chinese theft of American tech, but since the hundreds of thousands of Chinese students here that are backed by the CCP, must do as they are told by Beijing, we are in a very bad situation. The students MUST steal our tech or their families will suffer in China. Therefore, Trump must ban Chinese students now.

Links

Sgt Pat and Mal Antoni at Whatfinger News – Heavy use of X Posts, Sanbox links

CLICK HERE FOR COMMENTS

Two End Up In Handcuffs After Punches & Purses Start Flying Inside A Mall’s Indoor Family Entertainment Center – Outkick

Brits told to ‘wear a mask’ as flu spreads across country – Express (It doesn’t matter that masks are 100% NOT effective for Flu or even Covid viruses, what matters is the dictates, forcing Brits to wear masks, which means even harsher BS is coming right now) 

Russian couple ‘watched each other being tortured to death’ over £380,000,000 in crypto – Metro

U.S. Businesses Are Going Bankrupt At An Absolutely Blistering Pace – Economic Collapse

Pakistani Muslim Terrorist Busted Planning to Shoot Up University of Delaware – Frontpage Mag

Pay 0% interest until 2027 and tell Visa to kiss your balanced backside. Because nothing says freedom like watching minimum payments shrink faster than CNN’s ratings. → Sponsored 


‘The Five’: Talk about a MELTDOWN… – Fox


HORROR: Monster with Dozens of Prior Arrests Punches Elderly Man, Shoves Him onto Train Tracks in Chicago Gateway Pundit

The spectacle of Bryan Johnson and his livestreamed shrooms trip – TechCrunch

Stefanik Says Speaker Johnson is Protecting the DEEP STATE — Claims He’s Blocking Provision to Root Out the Illegal Weaponization Behind Crossfire Hurricane and Arctic Frost — Siding With Raskin Against Trump Republicans Gateway Pundit

8-Year-Old Boy Arrested After Pulling Gun on Teacher – Bearing Arms

1 in 5 Harvard Grads Claim to be ‘Disabled’ “Already, at one law school, 45 percent of students receive academic accommodations.” – Frontpage Mag

OpenAI CEO declares “code red” as Gemini gains 200 million users in 3 months – Ars Technica

Orca goes on beach to get a seal snack, throws it around like a rag doll – Fast clip – Rumble 😲

Air breathing fish that can survive on land for days. Holy cow… Imagine if they were Piranha – lol Rumble

Are they this stupid, or just willfully ignorant? Leftists need mental help – Fast clipRumble 😡

Chinese Tool California Rep Eric Swalwell is not a resident of California – Fast clipRumble

Ever hear of a pyrosome? It’s a huge creature made up of thousands of tiny ones – I never saw this before – Rumble

Latest Posts

Watch MAGA made this Whatfinger commercial, pretty cool huh!