NATO-Partner Serbia Admits Buying Chinese Missiles After Photos Leaked

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)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Photos You Should See – March 2026

TOPSHOT - Children play around an unexploded missile that landed in an open field on the outskirts of Qamishli, eastern Syria, on March 5, 2026. Gulf countries have been targeted by repeated waves of Iranian drone and missile attacks in retaliation for the massive US-Israeli air campaign. (Photo by Delil SOULEIMAN / AFP via Getty Images)

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