Javelin Missile Firing Questioned as Fake; Expert Says High Heat and Long Distance Cause Disappearance

Key facts

  • Javelin Missile Firing Questioned as Fake; Expert Says High Heat and Long Distance Cause Disappearance
  • After allegations arose that a video of a Javelin missile test by the Taiwan Army was faked because the missile appeared to vanish, military expert Li Si-ping clarified on June 7th that this is a normal phenomenon. He explained that the missile's rocket motor burns out quickly, and the small projectile is difficult to capture on camera at long distances, especially in high heat. The Military News Agency backed this up with a slow-motion video. Li concluded that the accusations, stemming from a misunderstanding of the weapon system, are a form of cognitive warfare intended to discredit the armed forces.
  • Source: PR Times
  • Date: June 7, 2026

Direct answer

After allegations arose that a video of a Javelin missile test by the Taiwan Army was faked because the missile appeared to vanish, military expert Li Si-ping clarified on June 7th that this is a normal phenomenon. He explained that the missile's rocket motor burns out quickly, and the small projectile is difficult to capture on camera at long distances, especially in high heat. The Military News Agency backed this up with a slow-motion video. Li concluded that the accusations, stemming from a misunderstanding of the weapon system, are a form of cognitive warfare intended to discredit the armed forces.

Citation
Javelin Missile Firing Questioned as Fake; Expert Says High Heat and Long Distance Cause Disappearance (June 7, 2026), PR Times
Source
PR Times
Date
June 7, 2026
After allegations arose that a video of a Javelin missile test by the Taiwan Army was faked because the missile appeared to vanish, military expert Li Si-ping clarified on June 7th that this is a normal phenomenon. He explained that the missile's rocket motor burns out quickly, and the small projectile is difficult to capture on camera at long distances, especially in high heat. The Military News Agency backed this up with a slow-motion video. Li concluded that the accusations, stemming from a misunderstanding of the weapon system, are a form of cognitive warfare intended to discredit the armed forces.
事件NQ 84/100出典:PR Times

📋 Article Processing Timeline

  • 📰 Published: June 7, 2026 at 13:34
  • 🔍 Collected: June 7, 2026 at 14:10 (36 min after Published)
  • 🤖 AI Analyzed: June 7, 2026 at 14:57 (47 min after Collected)
In response to external claims questioning the authenticity of the Army's Javelin missile firing, the Military News Agency released a magnified, frame-by-frame video late last night to clarify the situation. Military expert Li Si-ping stated today that the missile's flight path was entirely within the camera's range, but the image was blurry due to the long distance and hot weather. He emphasized that once the motor burns out, there is no flame, making the small projectile extremely difficult to capture with long-range photography, thus it was not faked.

The controversy began when the Military News Agency posted a short video on Facebook of an FGM-148 Javelin live-fire exercise. In the video, the missile's tail flame extinguishes a few seconds after launch, causing the missile to seemingly "disappear" from the frame, followed immediately by an explosion on the target ship, sparking public debate about its authenticity.

In response, the Military News Agency released another short film on Facebook late last night titled "Pause the video, and you'll see more clearly." The new video freezes the frame, zooms in on a specific area, and uses a red circle to track the missile, now just a tiny bright spot. It clearly reconstructs the entire process of the Javelin missile adopting its "top-attack" mode, first climbing upwards and then accurately smashing down onto the sea target from above.

Li Si-ping, editor-in-chief of "Tip of the Spear" magazine and author of the military book "Tank Deployment 2020," told CNA that the Javelin is a "fire-and-forget" anti-tank missile, characterized by its "top-attack" capability targeting the most vulnerable part of armor, though it can also be used in "direct-fire" mode. Its armor-penetrating principle utilizes a "tandem-charge warhead," which can first detonate the reactive armor on the outside of a target's main armor, then allow a jet stream to penetrate inside to maximize lethality.

Li explained that all Javelin missiles, upon hitting a target, will get close and impact the target just before detonating. Shaped charges generally come in two types: one is the "Explosively Formed Penetrator (EFP)," which has lower penetration but whose effectiveness is less affected by detonation distance; the other is the "High-Explosive Anti-Tank (HEAT)" round, which has high penetration but must maintain an optimal standoff distance for its jet to achieve maximum effect. The Javelin missile is the latter, so it must make contact with the target before detonating and cannot employ an airburst.

Regarding the Javelin's locking mechanism, Li explained that it consists of two main components: the "missile launch tube" and the "Control Launch Unit (CLU)." Before firing, the two must be connected and powered on by the operator. The key to aiming is not "whether there is a heat source, but whether the temperature difference between the target and the background is significant."

He cited an example from the Iraq War where U.S. forces used Javelins to strike buildings, the principle being the temperature difference between the building and its surroundings. If a difference exists, the CLU can achieve an image lock and feed the information into the missile's memory. Once ready, it can be fired. The missile then soft-launches from the tube, activates its rocket motor and infrared seeker, and continuously compares the information provided by the CLU until it hits the target. Reasons for missing a target are usually the sudden disappearance of the thermal signature, such as the target entering a tunnel, a forest, or a drastic change in temperature difference.

As for the recent allegations that the Javelin missile missed and the Army had pre-planted explosives on the target, Li pointed out that the missile's flight path was actually within the military camera's frame, but the distance was long and the temperature was high on that day. After the Javelin's rocket motor burns out, there is no flame, and the hot weather causes a sense of blurriness in the image, naturally affecting the resolution of long-range photography, let alone for a tiny missile.

Li stressed that the public's doubts clearly stem from a lack of understanding of the weapon system, leading them to believe the military faked it. He stated this is a systematic effort to smear them, and while it's one thing for the general public, if the group raising doubts are self-proclaimed veterans or military experts, their sudden claims resemble cognitive warfare. In fact, for years, the military has not been afraid of the media or the public seeing training mishaps or missed targets, because the point of exercises is precisely training.

FAQ

為何影片中的標槍飛彈會看似「消失」?

軍事專家李思平解釋,飛彈的火箭馬達在發射後很快會燃燒完畢,因此不再有尾焰火光。加上彈體本身很小,在遠距離和高溫天氣下,攝影機很難清晰捕捉到,並非造假或消失。

標槍飛彈是如何攻擊目標的?

標槍飛彈主要採「頂攻」模式,發射後會先向上攀升,再從上方向下俯衝,攻擊戰車等裝甲目標最脆弱的頂部。它使用的是高爆穿甲彈(HEAT),必須接觸目標後才引爆以發揮最大威力。

軍方如何回應這次的造假質疑?

軍聞社在深夜發布了一支新的短片,將原始畫面定格、局部放大,並用紅圈標示出飛彈的微小亮點,清晰地還原了飛彈從攀升到擊中目標的全過程,以澄清外界疑慮。

專家如何評論這次的「造假」爭議?

專家李思平認為,質疑者明顯不了解該武器系統,相關言論是有系統地在抹黑國軍,類似於認知作戰。他強調,軍方過往演訓若有失常也未曾懼怕外界檢視。

標槍飛彈的鎖定原理是什麼?

它透過控制發射單元(CLU)鎖定目標與背景的「溫差」。只要有溫差,CLU就能進行圖像鎖定並將資訊傳給飛彈,飛彈發射後會依此資訊透過紅外線尋標器持續比對直到命中目標。