Business Standard

AIR-LAUNCHED BRAHMOS BOOSTS DEEP STRIKE CAPABILITY

Will target terrorist camps, enemy airfields, tactical nuclear weapons

- AJAI SHUKLA New Delhi, 22 November

The supersonic BrahMos, already one of the world’s most highlyrega­rded cruise missiles, has moved onto a fast-developmen­t track.

Six months after an advanced, Block III, land-attack BrahMos was successful­ly tested in the Andaman & Nicobar Islands, the defence ministry announced on Wednesday the successful test of the first BrahMos air-launched cruise missile (ALCM), launched from a Indian Air Force (IAF) Sukhoi-30MKI fighter to strike a target floating in the Bay of Bengal.

The BrahMos ALCM enhances the IAF’s ability to strike heavily defended targets deep in enemy territory. Instead of having to run the gauntlet of enemy air defence systems all the way to the target, the Sukhoi-30MKI can release an ALCM from several hundred kilometres away, perhaps even without crossing the border. The BrahMos’ navigation system would be pre-fed the target’s coordinate­s, enabling a pinpoint strike. While most contempora­ry cruise missiles, like the US Tomahawk or Pakistan’s Babur, fly at subsonic speeds, making them vulnerable to being shot down, the BrahMos flies supersonic, at speeds up to Mach 2.5, giving the enemy little time to react.

Suitable targets for the BrahMos ALCM are terrorist camps deep inside enemy territory, high-value military targets like headquarte­rs or tactical nuclear weapon batteries, enemy airfields or high-value strategic infrastruc­ture.

“The completion of [the] tactical cruise missile triad will significan­tly bolster the IAF’s capabiliti­es in long-range air combat operations,” Tweeted Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman after the test.

The ministry announceme­nt noted this would “significan­tly bolster the IAF’s air combat operations capability from stand-off ranges.”

Land attack versions of the BrahMos are in already in army service, while naval warships like the Kolkata-class destroyers are armed with ship-launched BrahMos missiles for attacking targets ashore from the sea. However, the size and weight of the BrahMos made an air-launched version a daunting developmen­tal challenge.

To achieve this, two developmen­t agencies worked together. Hindustan Aeronautic­s Ltd (HAL) modified two Sukhoi-30MKI fighters – brutishly powerful aircraft already – to carry a missile as large and heavy as the BrahMos.

Meanwhile, BrahMos Aerospace, the Indo-Russian joint venture that developed the BrahMos, shortened and lightened the original version, bringing it down to an 8-m missile that weighs 2,560 km.

The BrahMos joint venture was establishe­d through Inter-Government Agreement between Moscow and New Delh in February 1998. The name BrahMos is an amalgam of two rivers — Brahmaputr­a and Moskva.

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