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India Test Fires Ballistic Missile From Underwater Platform

India today made a major stride towards completing its nuclear triad capability by successfully test firing a nuclear-capable ballistic missile, with a strike range of around 1500 kilometres, from an underwater platform in Bay of Bengal.

Completion of the nuclear triad will give India the ability to fire nuclear-tipped missiles from land, air and sea. This is the first missile in the underwater category to have been fully developed by India and can be launched from a submarine.

"The medium range K-5 ballistic missile was test fired successfully today from an underwater pontoon and all parameters of the test firing were met," Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) chief V K Saraswat told PTI from an undisclosed test area.

Officials said more than 10 trials of the missile had been carried out earlier. Today's was the last development trial of K-5.

Only a select few nations including the US, France, Russia and China have this type of missile capability, they said.

The development phase of the K-5 missile, which comes in the category of submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM), was over and it was now ready for deployment on various platforms including the around 6,000-tonne indigenous nuclear submarine INS Arihant which is under development, Saraswat said.

K-5 is part of the family of underwater missiles being developed by DRDO for the Indian strategic forces' underwater platforms. The missile, which is also known as BO5, has been developed by DRDO's Hyderabad-based Defence Research and Development Laboratory (DRDL).

This missile will help India to achieve the capability of launching nuclear warheads from underwater facilities. So far, India had the capability of delivering nuclear weapons from land and aerial platforms only.

"This is a significant development and capability enhancement. The launch of the SLBM is a complex technological development. And now since the missile is ready for induction, this is a major punctuation in India's indigenous missile development programme," said security expert Commodore (retd) Uday Bhaskar.

Another security expert Commander (retd) Sunil Chauhan said the development has helped India achieve a significant milestone for country's strategic forces. This success will give countervailing capability, he said.

Defence analyst Deba R Mohanty said by achieving the nuclear triad, India will certainly be on the upward trajectory of becoming a global military power in the real sense.

India has a no-first-use policy for nuclear weapons and the development of an SLBM boosts its retaliatory strike capability, experts said.

DRDO is also developing two more underwater missiles-- K-15 and Brahmos with strike ranges of 750 kilometres and 290 kilometres respectively.

India has for some time possessed the Agni series of ballistic missiles as well as fighter-bomber aircraft to constitute the land and air-based legs of the nuclear triad.

On April 19, last year, India had taken a giant leap in the missile field when it test-fired nuclear-capable Agni-V Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile that has brought China within its reach with a strike range of over 5000 km. This missile also gives India the capability to hit targets in eastern Europe, east Africa and the Australian coast.

Emerging story. Watch this space for updates as more details come in
FILED IN: Defence | Missiles
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Digression

4/D-66
Jan 29, 2013
11:06 AM

 Bonita .... "In our environment only one side is assured of destruction, the mutual being missing. Let's keep it that way."

I must be missing something. Please elaborate. I don't get it for sure.

Arun Maheshwari
Bangalore, India
3/D-45
Jan 29, 2013
08:36 AM

 Imran Ahmed Khan,

You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war.
- Albert Einstein

Let me give you one.

"The price of peace is eternal vigilance" - attributed to George C Marshall and others.

The best way to avoid a war is to let a potential adversary know he will never win it and will have to pay an unacceptable price if he starts one. In the days of the Cold War, the doctrine to prevent a nuclear war was MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction). In our environment only one side is assured of destruction, the mutual being missing. Let's keep it that way.

Bonita
Chennai, India
2/D-30
Jan 29, 2013
04:16 AM

You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war.
- Albert Einstein

Imran Ahmed Khan, Bangalore
1/D-3
Jan 28, 2013
12:53 AM

I congratulate Indian Navy and Indian defance  forces for a successful  Nucler Ballistic Missile from underwater platform in Bay of Bangal.We have to keep eye on an Indian Ocen a because of terririsam and specially china is devloping its navel power in an Indian Ocen .It is  a time  now  we have think our Sea Borders and devlop  and power in an Indian Ocen,Bay of Bangal and an Aribian Sea.To protact our mother land and our merchant ships.We have build powerful Air craft and Missile loded huge Navel ships and  to build under water Subs,and to our Navel Power in an Indian Ocean.

                                                           Jai Hind and Long Live India.

dilipkumar.chitnis, mumbai
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