Missile
power
India’s Recent
weapons commissioned The success of the canister-launched flight trial of Agni-V
reaffirms India’s status as a world class missile power. By T.S. SUBRAMANIAN
“A
game-changer” and “a giant leap in the country’s deterrence capability” was how
Avinash Chander, Scientific Adviser to the
Defence Minister, characterised the success of the canister-launched flight
trial of Agni-V on January 31, also the day he laid down office. The strategic
missile has a range of more than 5,000 kilometres and confirms India’s status
as a world-class missile power.
India now ranks fifth or sixth in the
world, behind the United States, Russia, France, China/Israel, having missiles
that can carry
nuclear warheads and can be launched from land, sea and air. The Defence
Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), of which Avinash Chander was
Director-General, is behind the development of India’s missiles. The strategic
missiles, capable of carrying nuclear warheads, are a varied lot: Prithvi-II, Dhanush, Agni-I, II, III, IV and V, all
surface-to-surface missiles.
The single-stage, liquid-propelled
Prithvi-II (10 metres long, weighing six tonnes and 1 m in diameter), the
earliest to be developed
under the country’s Integrated Guided Missile Development Programme (IGMDP),
can strike at targets situated more
than 350 km away. Dhanush is the ship-based variant of Prithvi-II. The five Agni variants, all ballistic missiles,
form the bulwark of India’s nuclear deterrence. The single-stage,
15-metre-long, 12-tonne Agni-I, with a range of 750 km, was developed in 15
months after the Kargil war ended in June 1999. The two-stage Agni-II (20 m, 17
tonnes) followed. Agni-III’s weight of 50 tonnes was a quantum jump. Agni-IV
used several new technologies, including rocket motors made of composites, to
bring the weight down to just 17 tonnes to have modern avionics in order to
accommodate navigation and guidance systems. With the addition of an extra
(third) stage, Agni-III/IV metamorphosed into the redoubtable Agni-V. The
January 31 launch was significant for one more reason than the long range of
the missile: it was the first canisterised launch, from a truck, of an
Indian-made intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).
According to informed sources, a missile
that can carry a conventional warhead of 500 kg or more is also capable of carrying
a nuclear warhead. In the surface-to-air category, “a great success story”,
according to DRDO spokesman Ravi Gupta, has been the Akash weapon system, for which the Army
and the Air Force have already placed production orders worth Rs.23,000 crore.
The 710-kg Akash, carrying a 55-kg payload, is the equivalent of the U.S.’
“Patriot” missile and can destroy fighter aircraft, cruise missiles,
helicopters and manoeuvring targets such as unmanned aerial vehicles, flying 25
km away. It can fly at 2.5 Mach and climb to an altitude of 18 km.
Interceptors
India ranks after the U.S., Russia, China
and Israel in interceptor missile capability, providing the country with a
ballistic missile
defence (BMD) system. The BMD system detects, identifies and tracks the flight
path of incoming ballistic missiles. Two
interceptors, called Advanced Air Defence (AAD) and Prithvi Air Defence (PAD), with seekers can intercept ballistic missiles
coming from adversarial locations 2,000 km to 5,000 km away. India’s hidden asset, the
submarine-launched K15, carries a nuclear warhead, is under production, while K-4, another
submarine-launched missile, with a range of 3,000 km, is under development. Shourya is the land version of the K- 15
and is launched from a canister. BrahMos, jointly developed by Russia and India, is a supersonic cruise
missile and can fly
at Mach 3. Cruise missiles are called so because they cruise at a constant
altitude. BrahMos carries conventional warheads. Its block II version with
target discrimination capability and block III version with steep diving
capability even at supersonic
speeds have also been developed.
Nirbhay is a long-range subsonic cruise
missile, flying at 0.7 Mach. Its second flight on October 17, 2014, was a big
success. Nirbhay is an innovative amalgam of missile and aeronautical
technologies—it lifts off like a missile, but once it jettisons its booster
engine, its wings spread out and its turbo-jet engine in the second stage kicks
in to enable the contraption to fly like an aircraft. While BrahMos can strike
targets 290 km away with conventional warheads, Nirbhay, carrying conventional
or nuclear warheads, has a reach of 1,000 km.
(Published
in Frontline.in)
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