Why do China and other powers still want aircraft carriers?
Despite the increasing prominence of drone swarms and stealth submarines in modern warfare, aircraft carriers continue to be a symbol of military power. China is heavily investing in these warships, with its fourth carrier, expected to be nuclear-powered and feature electromagnetic catapults, rapidly taking shape in Dalian.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedDespite the increasing prominence of drone swarms and stealth submarines in modern warfare, aircraft carriers continue to be a symbol of military power. China is heavily investing in these warships, with its fourth carrier, expected to be nuclear-powered and feature electromagnetic catapults, rapidly taking shape in Dalian. Satellite images reveal significant progress on this Type 004 vessel, which could rival the launch capacity of advanced US carriers. Other nations, including France, Turkey, India, and Japan, are also investing in aircraft carriers. This continued investment occurs even though recent conflicts have demonstrated the vulnerability of large surface warships to drones and missiles.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
4 extractedAircraft carriers remain a symbol of military might despite advancements in drone and submarine warfare.
China's fourth aircraft carrier is fast taking shape, according to satellite images.
Large surface warships are vulnerable to drones and missiles, as shown in recent conflicts.
The Type 004 carrier is expected to be nuclear-powered and have electromagnetic catapults.