By
2010-2011, India hopes
to gatecrash into a very exclusive club of countries, which have both
ICBMs
(intercontinental ballistic missiles) and SLBMs (submarine-launched
ballistic
missiles) as well as BMD (ballistic missile defence)
capabilities.
Only the US and Russia strictly qualify for this club
as of now, if all the three capabilities — ICBM, SLBM and BMD —
are
taken together, with countries like China not too far behind.
Top
defence scientists, on the sidelines of the annual DRDO awards on
Monday, told
TOI
they were quite confident India
would have ICBMs and SLBMs, even though their strike ranges would be
much lesser
than American, Russian or Chinese missiles, as also a functional BMD
system soon
after the turn of this decade.
DRDO, of course, often promises much
more than it delivers. But this time, it's ready to walk its talk,
emboldened by
the successful test of the 3,500-km range Agni-III missile last
week.
Take ICBMs first. "We have already started the design work for
Agni-V, with a range of over 5,000-km. It basically involves
development of a
third composite stage for the two-stage Agni-III," said Agni programme
director
Avinash Chander.
"We will be ready to test Agni-V by 2010," he added.
There will not be an Agni-IV missile, with DRDO leapfrogging from
intermediate
range Agni-III to the almost ICBM-like Agni-V. "We have the capability
to go for
even longer ranges but it's for the political leadership to take a
decision on
such matters," said Chander.
As for the fledgling but "unique"
two-tier BMD system, capable of tracking and destroying hostile
missiles both
inside (endo) and outside (exo) the earth's atmosphere, it will be tested again
in July.
The BMD system has been tested two times till now. The first
test was in November 2006 when an "exo-atmospheric" hypersonic
interceptor
missile successfully destroyed an incoming Prithvi missile at an
altitude of
around 40-50 km, demonstrating a capability akin to the Israeli
Arrow-2 BMD
system.
The second time, in December 2007, an "endo-atmospheric"
interceptor successfully took on the "enemy" missile at a 15-km
altitude, on the
lines of the American Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) system.
"Around
July, we will test the exo-interceptor again. This time, we will test
it at an
80-km altitude against a longer range 'enemy' missile. Then, in
September-October, we will test the exo and endo together," DRDO
chief
controller for missiles V K Saraswat told
TOI.
"BMD is very important
since there are ballistic missiles all around us. If you are strong in
your
defence, an adversary will think twice before any misadventure," he
added. The
BMD system should be ready for deployment by 2011 or so, after several
tests
against a variety of missiles to ensure a kill probability of 99.8%,
said
Saraswat.
The third capability in the shape of the K-15 SLBM, which
has been tested only from submersible pontoon launchers so far, should
also be
ready by that time to be integrated into the indigenous
nuclear-powered
submarines being built under the secretive ATV (advanced technology
vessel)
programme.
The initial range of K-15 will, however, be limited to
750-km, far less than the over 5,000-km range SLBMs brandished by the
'Big-5'
countries. Nevertheless, it will mark the completion of India's
"nuclear triad",
which so far is limited to the Agni missiles and fighters like
Mirage-2000s
jury-rigged to carry nuclear weapons.
Indian defence planners have
long bemoaned the absence of nuclear-powered submarines, armed with
nuclear-tipped missiles, since they are considered the most reliable,
survivable
and deadly nuclear weapons
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