This Day in History: China Develops the Hydrogen Bomb

By Ned Kelly, June 17, 2023

3 0

On June 17, 1967, the People’s Republic of China announced a successful hydrogen bomb test, becoming the world’s fourth thermonuclear power after the US, Soviet Union and UK – but ahead of France.

Dropped at 7am from a Hong-6 jet bomber over the Lop Nur Test Base in southeastern Xinjiang, the H-bomb was parachute-retarded for an airburst at 2,960 meters (see video below), and had an explosive power 150 times that of the atomic bomb used by the US on Hiroshima at the end of WW2.

China had made fast progress in developing nuclear weapons in the 1960s, committed as they were to breaking the superpowers’ monopoly on nuclear weapons, and to ensure Chinese security against the Soviet and US threats.

In a 32-month period from testing its first atomic bomb on October 16, 1964 at Lop Nor – an area of seasonal salt lake sand marshes – the PRC launched its first nuclear missile on October 25, 1966, before the detonation of the H-bomb in 1967.

In comparison, the time between the US’s fission-to-fusion – its first atomic test to first hydrogen bomb test – was 86 months; for the USSR it was 75 months; for the UK 66 months; and for France – later on – 105 months. 

While China had received extensive technical help from the Soviet Union to jump-start their nuclear program, by as early as 1960 the rift between the the two commmunist superstates had become so great that the Soviet Union ceased all assistance to China.

China’s total nuclear arsenal size today is estimated to range anywhere between 240 nuclear weapons to as many as 3,000 warheads, all hidden within an extensive tunnel system referred to as the ‘Underground Great Wall.’

Watch the detonation below:


For more This Day in History stories, click here.

more news

This Day in History: Henry Kissinger Secretly Visits China

Half a century ago, then-US National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger flew to Beijing to meet with Chinese officials.

This Day in History: Zhu Jianhua Sets High Jump World Record

On June 11, 1983 Shanghai-born high jumper Zhu Jianhua cleared 2.37m at a meet in Beijing, setting a new world record.

This Day in History: Mukden Tiger Warlord Assassinated by Japan

On June 4, 1928, a train carrying warlord Zhang Zuolin from Beijing to Shenyang was ripped apart by a huge explosion.

This Day in History: China Enacts New Marriage Law

When Mao Zedong famously declared "Women hold up half the sky."

This Day in History: Aleister Crowley Summons Demon in Shanghai

In 1906, the occultist, mystic, magician and self-proclaimed Beast 666 came to Shanghai to summon his Holy Guardian Angel...

This Day in History: Hainan Island Becomes a Province

On April 13, 1988, Hainan Island and its surrounding island groups, formerly a division of Guangdong, were declared an independent province.

0 User Comments

In Case You Missed It…

We're on WeChat!

Scan our QR Code at right or follow us at ThatsSuzhou for events, guides, giveaways and much more!

7 Days in Suzhou With thatsmags.com

Weekly updates to your email inbox every Wednesday

Download previous issues

Never miss an issue of That's Suzhou!

Visit the archives