Long March launch vehicle family
CASC's official home page says the Long March family has made more than 290 flights.
Built by archive
China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation is the Beijing-based Chinese state-owned aerospace and defense conglomerate behind the Long March launch family, Beidou space systems, and multiple missile and UAV production lines attached to this catalog.
2 weapon systemsCASC's official English site describes the corporation as a large state-owned enterprise group engaged in the research, design, manufacture, test, and launch of space products, while also operating defense systems and broader aerospace services. Its own history page traces the corporate line back to a 1956 missile research institution and the 1993 China Aerospace Corporation before the current CASC entity was established in 1999.
For this catalog, the builder profile gives the /built-by/ archive context around Chinese launch vehicles, satellites, missile systems, and UAV families tied to CASC and its subsidiaries. That background helps readers understand how a large state-owned aerospace group connects to smaller weapon and system entries in the archive.
CASC's official home page says the Long March family has made more than 290 flights.
CASC's official home page says it is responsible for the development of the launch vehicles and most of the satellites for China's Beidou Navigation Program.
A CASC news item says CH-3, CH-4, and CH-5 UAV models from CASC units drew attention at the Shenzhen unmanned-systems exhibition.
CASC's Abu Dhabi exhibition coverage says ALIT, a CASC subsidiary, displayed the LY-80 air-defense-missile weapon system unit.
CASC's Defense Systems page describes the group as the only manufacturer of intercontinental strategic nuclear missiles in China.
CASC's official history says China established its first missile research institution, the No. 5 Research Academy under the Ministry of National Defense, on October 8, 1956.
The official history page says the First Session of the Eighth National People's Congress approved the creation of China Aviation Industry Corporation and China Aerospace Corporation after abolishing the Ministry of Aerospace Industry.
CASC's history page says the current China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation was established with State Council approval on July 1, 1999.
A CASC news report said CH-3, CH-4, and CH-5 UAV models from CASC units were displayed at the Shenzhen unmanned-systems exhibition.
CASC's official Defense Systems pages published the company's strategic nuclear missile, air-and-missile-defense, conventional missile, and UAV portfolio descriptions.
CASC's English web presence is official but somewhat fragmented across legacy pages, so this profile normalizes the current legal English name and keeps corporate-relationship claims limited to sourced subsidiaries and history pages. The company is a state-owned Chinese aerospace and defense group, and the reused headquarters image comes from a CC BY-SA 4.0 Wikimedia Commons photo of the Beijing building.
Category
Crewed aircraft, drones, and loitering munitions.
Category
Systems that contest aircraft, missiles, helicopters, and drones.