Chinese ‘military’ planes reportedly seen at Bagram

GEAR CHECK: Our readers don't just follow the news - they stay ready. Featured gear from this story is below.

Dylan Lassiter

Multiple unconfirmed reports about Chinese ‘military’ planes landing at Bagram Airbase in Afghanistan have circulated on social media and mainstream headlines for the past few days.

While these reports were denied by the Taliban, others believe that even if it isn’t true yet, it will be soon enough.

Back in business at Bagram

Yun Sun, director of the China Program at the Stimson Center think tank, is one of those who see this event as entirely plausible. In early September, Yun told U.S. News, “Given their past experience, the Chinese must be eager to get their hands on whatever the U.S. has left at the base.”

Once word of that assumption made it to China, the spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Wang Wenbin, denied the idea that China plans to overtake Bagram and use it for their own interests in the region.

In that same U.S. News article, an anonymous source working closely with the Chinese government stated that the country is “conducting a feasibility study about the effect of sending workers, soldiers and other staff related to its foreign economic investment program known as the Belt and Road Initiative in the coming years to Bagram.”

This means that the centrifugal point for moving forward with the Belts and Roads Initiative in Afghanistan would be, somewhat ironically, located at the United States’ former mainstay in the nation.

This leaves only the assumption that, alongside the infrastructure enhancements which are the driving factor for why the Belts and Roads Initiative exists in the first place, there would be a Chinese military presence that is concurrent to those other initiatives.

Only time will tell whether a Chinese military presence becomes normalized, or even the case, in Afghanistan. The one sure thing is that the relationship between these two nations is steadily progressing, regardless of where it may end up.

 

You may also like

Blog

Just weeks after the United States and Iran agreed to a ceasefire aimed at ending months of fighting, the fragile truce has unraveled. Fresh military strikes, attacks on commercial shipping, and renewed threats from both sides have reignited fears that diplomacy may be giving way to another dangerous phase of the conflict.
The U.S. Navy has identified the naval aviator who went missing after a helicopter was forced to make an emergency landing in the Arabian Sea. Commander Gabriel Edwards, commanding officer of Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 5, was posthumously promoted to captain as search efforts came to a tragic end.
A former Michigan Army National Guard member has been arrested after federal prosecutors accused him of trying to help ISIS carry out a mass-casualty attack on a U.S. military base. Investigators say the alleged plot involved drones, explosives, and tactical support before the suspect was taken into custody by the FBI.
An unknown pilot celebrated America's upcoming 250th anniversary with an extraordinary aviation tribute, flying a meticulously planned route over Ohio that created a giant outline of the United States with "USA 250th" written inside. The patriotic flight quickly captured attention online ahead of Independence Day celebrations.
A Tesla driver who suffered a major heart attack while driving between Atlanta and Birmingham credits the vehicle's technology and his son's quick thinking for helping save his life. After the medical emergency began, his son remotely redirected the car to a hospital using the Tesla app while the vehicle continued operating with Full Self-Driving (Supervised) engaged.

Like This Story? Check Out What Our Community Is Buying

Our best sellers are designed for real-world use - not hype.

View Best Sellers