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China’s war wolves: From commercial tech to combat power

(The Digital Artist / Pixabay)

By Craig Singleton and Jack Burnham

China is not just modernizing its military. It is reimagining how future wars will be fought. The People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA’s) embrace of “intelligentized warfare” (智能化战争) reflects a systematic effort to integrate artificial intelligence (AI), robotics, and unmanned systems into frontline operations. Robotic quadrupeds — often described in Chinese reporting as “robotic wolves” — sit at the center of this shift. These robots are not propaganda props. They offer a clear window into how China is converting commercial innovation into combat power.

The PLA’s robotics strategy matters because Taiwan is the most plausible test case for many of these cutting-edge systems. A cross-strait conflict would force the PLA to confront its hardest operational problems: contested littorals, dense urban terrain, degraded communications environments, and the threat of high casualties in the opening phase of combat. Semi-autonomous and autonomous platforms could shape whether the PLA sustains operational momentum or stalls when it matters most.

China’s robotic wolves demonstrate what this shift looks like in practice. Leveraging advances in commercial robotics, light detection and ranging (LiDAR) technology, and China’s military-civil fusion strategy, the PLA is testing quadrupeds that can scout ahead of infantry, breach obstacles, and transport supplies. Chinese reporting and training footage depict these wolves not as stand-alone units but as part of networked, attritable systems designed to share data and coordinate actions under fire. The payoff is scale and resilience: a networked wolf pack can cover more terrain, support multiple units simultaneously, and continue operating even when individual systems fail.

Read more at Foundation for Defense of Democracies

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