China’s Jiutian SS-UAV: Game-Changing “Drone Carrier” Set for Maiden Flight

With a lot of warfare changing to drones, especially smaller and cheaper units, China has an interesting concept they’re about to start testing next month. Of interest, the first video appears to show attacks against the US Navy. And the Ukraine war is the testing ground for this new type of warfare.

https://southfront.press/chinas-jiutian-ss-uav-game-changing-drone-carrier-set-for-maiden-flight

China is preparing to test its next-generation unmanned aerial system, the Jiutian SS-UAV, a massive high-altitude “mothership” designed to deploy swarms of attack drones and precision-guided missiles. This unmanned behemoth could redefine aerial warfare, blending long-range reconnaissance with strike capabilities in a single platform.

The Jiutian SS-UAV boasts staggering performance metrics:

  • Range: 7,000–7,500 km (comparable to strategic bombers)
  • Service ceiling: 15 km (bypassing most air defenses)
  • Payload capacity: Two launch modules housing hundreds of FPV kamikaze drones (25–35 km range)
  • Heavy ordnance: Anti-ship missiles, stealth cruise missiles, and aeroballistic weapons
  • Air-to-air self-defense: PL-12E/PL-15 missiles to engage enemy fighters
  • AI coordination: Autonomous swarm control for mass drone attacks

Reportedly weighing 15 tons with a 25-meter wingspan, the Jiutian matches the Global Hawk’s size but adds a devastating offensive punch, making it a dual-role recon-strike platform.

A Drone Swarm Revolution

The Jiutian’s most disruptive feature is its ability to deploy over 100 loitering munitions (akin to Russia’s Geran-2) in a single sortie. These drones, guided by AI, could overwhelm air defenses, strike high-value targets, or conduct electronic warfare, all while the mothership remains safely at altitude.

By merging long-range strike, drone swarm warfare, and standoff missile attacks, China is creating a system with no direct equivalent in modern arsenals.

Challenging U.S. Air Dominance

The Jiutian’s 7,000+ km range allows it to operate deep in the Pacific, threatening U.S. bases, carrier groups, or allied territories. Its high-altitude endurance complicates interception, while its swarm tactics could saturate even advanced defenses like Patriot.

Notably, the drone carrier’s air-to-air missiles suggest China anticipates contested airspace, a direct challenge to U.S. and allied air superiority. Analysts warn it could shift the balance in scenarios like a Taiwan contingency, where mass drone attacks might precede larger assaults.

The Jiutian’s first test flight is expected in June 2025. The U.S. has yet to field a comparable system, though projects like DARPA’s Gremlins (recoverable drone swarms) hint at similar directions.

The Jiutian is expected to “spook the U.S.,” emphasizing its potential to outmaneuver traditional air defenses. If successful, China will have pioneered a new paradigm: aerial warfare dominated by AI-coordinated swarms launched from stealthy, high-altitude carriers.

The Future of Warfare Takes Flight

The Jiutian SS-UAV isn’t just another drone—it’s a floating airbase that merges reconnaissance, electronic warfare, and strike missions into a single platform. By leveraging swarm autonomy and long-range precision weapons, China is betting on asymmetric saturation tactics to counter superior fighter fleets and missile defenses. When the Jiutian takes to the skies in June, the world will witness a glimpse of next-gen warfare, where the sky itself becomes a battlespace ruled by drone armies. For the U.S. and its allies, the race to counter this technology starts now.