You mean not capable at all of launching on notice. If it is not destroyed in a first strike, there is still plenty of time (a few hours) to be destroyed in a follow-on strike as it sits there getting fueled up to launch, especially if it is being deployed from a launch pad rather than in a silo and satellite imagery is able to pick this up and send the coordinates to a B-2, or even just send another ICBM over to take it out.I think what you described and what he wrote, are not necessarily at odds with each other, specifically this part of his post:
Retaining a silo based DF-5C variant to complement introduction of new (and additional) road mobile DF-31A, road and probably rail mobile DF-41, and submarine JL-2/094 missiles with additional warheads (resulting in a likely net gain of total operational nuclear warheads compared to previous years) sounds quite sensible to me, especially in the foreseeable future.
If these missiles (including silo based ones) can be tied into an effective early warning system and nuclear decision making system with launch on command, then the fact that there will be some missiles retained in silos is not that much of a big deal, so long as you can fire your retaliatory missiles before they are destroyed by the opposing side's first strike.
That point however, is one reason why I'm not very sure about retaining a DF-5 variant is the fact that it is liquid fuelled and not as capable of being launched on notice.
The difference I see between our views is that all I'm saying about the DF-5C is that it's probably just a short term temporizing fix for increasing ICBM-range warheads while DF-41 numbers are being ramped up, and will eventually be retired when they reach the end of their service lives, whereas I believe weig2000 advocates developing a new generation of liquid-fueled ICBMs to replace the DF-5 series. Chinese silos rely on stealth to survive. US and Russian silos rely on sheer massed numbers to survive. Unfortunately for silos, they are not mobile and their chances of being found can only increase with time. Unless China has also built hundreds of fake silos that can also defeat ground penetrating radar sats, I don't think this method of deterrence is feasible and should be abandoned in favor of mobile ICBMs like the DF-41 that can stay hidden inside tunnels, rail cars, and on the vast highways and side roads of China's transportation infrastructure.