The US has for decades operated under the understanding that neither it nor its adversaries would use ICBMs to deliver non-nuclear payloads because they would be indistinguishable from a first-use nuclear strike*, which would mean their use would risk a nuclear response even before they hit. However, there is a growing school of thought that China may disagree with this doctrinally, and may not bind itself by the same restriction.
*clearly this statement can be interrogated
Resolves NA if there is no war between China and the US before 2040.
Resolves YES if China uses Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles to strike the continental US or Hawaii (not US Territories), and those missiles deliver non-nuclear payloads.
(Note that 'non-nuclear' includes biological and chemical weapons, if such a question becomes relevant)
Resolves NO otherwise.
War= consensus understanding. If there is a disagreement over whether a war has taken place, I will make a decision and if I am unavailable then market participants can nominate a mutually agreeable adjudicator. The guiding principle should be that war involves a 'period' of military conflict rather than a single incident or even a brief spasm of violence. Brevity might be compensated for by the rapid accomplishment of strategic or even tactical goals.
ICBMs= missiles with a range greater than 5,500km (approx)
The distance between China and Hawaii is longer than what is usually considered the max range of IRBMs which do not have a 'taboo' on non-nuclear payloads. In that sense this question should not be complex or controversial
The introduction of hypersonic delivery systems may recomplicate this, but I will not rule on whether they would count until we have a clearer understanding of what they will look like and how they will be used.
For total clarity: missiles launched from outside of mainland China would not count, even if they are ballistic and long-range.
@ArmandodiMatteo Hainan and other offshore islands count but islands in South China Sea (administratively within Hainan province) do not.