Could China’s containerised aircraft launcher reshape rules of modern warfare?
Fresh footage has emerged showing China's truck-mounted electromagnetic catapult launching a drone, developed by the Beijing Institute of Technology (BIT). The system utilizes three eight-wheeled trucks that connect to form a continuous platform for drone takeoff.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedFresh footage has emerged showing China's truck-mounted electromagnetic catapult launching a drone, developed by the Beijing Institute of Technology (BIT). The system utilizes three eight-wheeled trucks that connect to form a continuous platform for drone takeoff. This development follows a previous sighting in December of containerized weapon systems, including missile launchers and radar, integrated into modified freight containers aboard the cargo vessel Zhong Da 79. The new video also depicts these containerized modules, including the segmented electromagnetic aircraft launch system, being loaded onto the same vessel. The BIT school of mechanical engineering posted the video, which has since been deleted.
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Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe Beijing Institute of Technology’s (BIT) school of mechanical engineering posted the video to social media.
The new video features segmented electromagnetic aircraft launch system (EMALS) modules being loaded onto the Zhong Da 79.
Footage shows three eight-wheeled flat-top trucks forming a platform for a fixed-wing propeller drone to take off.
The system was first seen aboard the cargo vessel Zhong Da 79 at a Shanghai shipyard about six months prior to the video's release.
Photographs from a late-December sighting showed military equipment integrated into modified freight containers, including vertical missile launchers and radar sensors.