India
building 6,000km nuclear-capable missile
NEW
DELHI
Petroleumworld.com
13 12 07
India
announced major plans to increase its nuclear capabilities
Wednesday, saying it was close to testing a ballistic
missile capable
of hitting targets up to 6,000 kilometres (3,800 miles) away.
Such a distance would nearly double the military's current strike range, putting
targets even in Europe within reach, and came one day after neighbouring Pakistan
tested a nuclear capable cruise missile.
M. Natarajan, who heads the Indian government's Defence Research and Development
Organisation (DRDO), said flight tests of Agni-IV ballistic missiles would begin
within months.
"We want to repeat the tests and we have plans for a minimum two such repeats," Natarajan
told India's Times Now private television network.
"One, sometime within the first quarter of next year, and another within
nine to 12 months," said the chief of the DRDO, which has been developing
India's missile arsenal since 1983.
"Although I won't say the exact figure I would reckon the figure of 5,000
to 6,000 kilometres should be quite adequate for the country's needs."
V. K. Sarswat, head of the DRDO's strategic systems branch, confirmed the Agni-IV
was under development while other scientists told AFP it was likely to be fully
operational within three years.
India in April tested its longest-range Agni-III missile, capable of reaching
targets 3,500 kilometres inside neighbouring China, with Saraswat saying the
weapon was being further upgraded.
New Delhi has already deployed two variants of the Agni -- a 700-kilometre (434-mile)
Agni-I and the 2,500-kilometre (1,550-mile) range Agni-II after flight-testing
both missiles numerous times since 1993.
The comments by the DRDO officials followed rival Pakistan's announcement that
it had tested a nuclear-capable cruise missile, vowing a strong response to any
international attempt to seize its atomic arsenal.
India and Pakistan have fought three wars, two of them over the disputed northern
territory of Kashmir. The two countries are currently engaged in peace talks
over a range of bilateral issues, including Kashmir, but both have continued
a military build-up.
Saraswat also announced two tests earlier this month of Indian manufactured interceptor
missiles, saying they performed better than Patriot air-defence batteries manufactured
by US defence group Raytheon.
Work on the two separate nuclear-capable missile interception systems began in
1998 and despite technology refusals by Western powers they will be ready by
2010, he said.
"The effectiveness of the system would depend on how much can we spend on
it but it is required by a country like ours as we have a no-first-use (nuclear
strike) principle," the scientist said.
Saraswat said the missile defence shield, backed by a string of coastline radars
and high-end monitoring systems, would also make it almost impossible for hostile
aircraft to penetrate Indian airspace.
"It is a defensive posture and so it doesn't alter the balance (of power)
in the region," he said, after two 1.2-tonne interceptors shot down two
incoming ballistic missiles in the Bay of Bengal in two tests earlier this month.
Story
by Pratap Chakravarty from AFP
AFP 12 1346 GMT 12 07
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