Aerial Warfare

India Conducts Successful Test Launch of Agni-III Intermediate-range Ballistic Missile

243
India Conducts Successful Test Launch of Agni-III Intermediate-range Ballistic Missile
India Conducts Successful Test Launch of Agni-III Intermediate-range Ballistic Missile

India carried out a successful training launch of an Intermediate Range Ballistic Missile, Agni-3 from APJ Abdul Kalam Island, off the coast of Odisha in Balasore, India, on 23 November. It was performed as part of a routine user training effort and supported by India’s Strategic Forces Command (SFC). The launch was carried out for a predetermined range and validated all operational parameters of the system. The Indian Ministry of Defence (MoD, Raksha Mantralaya)’s statement said that the recent test was conducted for a pre-determined range. It helped in assessing and validating all the operational parameters, as well as the reliability of the Agni-III missile system.

The Agni-III (Fire) is an Indian intermediate-range ballistic missile inducted into service in 2011 as the successor of the Agni-II. It has a range of 3,000 to 5,000 kilometres and can reach targets deep inside neighbouring countries including China. India’s credible minimum deterrence envisaged a nuclear triad of counter-strike capability which required a long-range missile to provide robust second strike capability. Driven by the need for retaliation to defeat emerging anti-ballistic missile (ABM) defence and countermeasures, this capability requires a compact missile which can carry ABM payloads and weapons in a configuration similar to a MIRV.

Agni-III Intermediate-range Ballistic Missile
Agni-III Intermediate-range Ballistic Missile

The Agni-III was developed as the successor to the Agni-II. Designed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), Agni-III is a two-stage ballistic missile capable of nuclear weapons delivery. DRDO formed a separate propulsion plant in September 2001 to develop large-sized solid-propellant rocket engines, including the infrastructure for propellant casting. The stubby, two-stage solid-fuel missile is compact enough for easy mobility and flexible deployment on a number of surface and sub-surface platforms. The missile is equipped with sophisticated navigation, guidance and control systems and advanced on-board computer systems.

The two stages of Agni-III has an overall diameter of 2 metres (6 ft 7 in). Initially, The mass of first-stage is about 32 tonnes and 7.7 metres (25 ft) long, and 10 tonnes and 3.3 metres (11 ft) long for second stage. The missile was expected to support a wide range of warhead configurations, with a 4,500-kilometre (2,800 mi) range and a total payload weight of 2,490 kilograms (5,490 lb). The ground support system and launcher are developed by Research & Development Establishment (Engineers). The circular error probable (CEP) of Agni-III is within 40 metres (130 ft). The US Air Force’s National Air and Space Intelligence Center estimated that in June 2017, fewer than 10 launchers had been deployed.

Exit mobile version