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    HomeAsiaNATO-partner Serbia admits buying Chinese missiles after photos leaked

    NATO-partner Serbia admits buying Chinese missiles after photos leaked

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    BELGRADE, March 13 (Reuters) - Serbia ‌recently purchased Chinese CM-400AKG air-to-surface ballistic missiles for its ​air force, becoming the weapon's first European operator, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said late on Thursday.

    Serbia ⁠is striving to balance its partnership with NATO and aspirations to join the European Union with its centuries-old religious, ethnic and political alliance with Russia and ​strategic ties with China, a major investor. 

    "We have a significant number of those missiles, and ‌we will have even more," Vucic said in a live broadcast by Serbia's state RTS TV, days after the first images of the missiles mounted on a Serbian ⁠plane leaked online. 

    Vucic said the Serbian air force had adapted ⁠its Soviet-made MiG-29 fighter jets to carry the CM-400AKG.

    Croatia - an EU and NATO member, and Serbia's foe during the wars of the 1990s - has criticised the missile purchase as a threat to regional stability, an attempt to alter the ‌military balance, and a sign of a growing arms race in the Balkans.

    The ⁠CM-400AKG, manufactured by China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation (CASIC), ‌is a supersonic air-to-surface ballistic missile. It can ​carry either a 150 kg (330 lb) blast warhead or a 200 kg (440 lb) penetrator warhead and has a range of up to 400 km (248 miles). 

    It saw its ‌first combat use during the 2025 India–Pakistan conflict, when ​Pakistan's air force targeted an ⁠Indian S-400 air defence system.

    Vucic declined to disclose the price Serbia ‌paid for the missiles, saying only it ⁠received a "slight discount".

    Serbia has allocated around 2.6% of its GDP for military expenditures this year.  

    In recent times, Serbia has purchased the FK-3 surface-to-air defence system - similar to ​Russia's S-300 or the ‌U.S. Patriot system - and CH-92A combat drones from China, while at the same time ⁠buying 12 new Rafale fighter jets ​from France's Dassault along with helicopters and cargo planes from Airbus. 

    (Reporting by ​Aleksandar Vasovic; Editing by Kevin Buckland)

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