Successful testing of US aircraft carrier will spill oil into China's stomach


The ongoing arms race between the US and China has intensified

US. Navy officials say a massive 40,000-pound blast off the coast of Florida has caused the ship to capsize.

BEIJING: The U.S. Navy's aircraft carrier Gerald Ford successfully zinced in the face of a massive 20-ton bomb blast at sea, meaning the aircraft carrier was successful in its tests, which led to oil spills in China's stomach.

China recently tried to intimidate countries around the world by threatening its killer missiles, but a successful test of the US ship would also lighten the threat of its missiles, Defense Department experts said.

The nuclear ship was tested offshore in the state of Florida last Sunday, the second such test since June 18 and July 16, according to an official US Navy press release.

U.S. Navy officials detonated a massive 40,000-pound explosive device near the ship, which was intended to test the ship's ability to withstand shock and the capability of the entire system.

Navy officials called the trial a success. No major injuries, fires or floods were reported in the aftermath of the blast, according to a report published on the US Naval Institute's news portal USNI News.

"We had zero percent damage to the ship, and no fire was reported," Gerald Ford's commanding officer Capt. Paul Lanzilonta told reporters Monday.

The Chinese military has been closely monitoring our experiment since 2015, so China must have been keeping a close eye on the successful test last Sunday.

In 2015, China launched two highly lethal missiles, the DAP-21D and DF-26, with a range of up to 5,000 km, and Chen sought to make the missiles world-famous as killer missiles.

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