Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

ARJUN TANKS TO GET HOMEGROWN MISSILE IN 2018

- Rahul Singh and Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: India’s homegrown Arjun Mk-2 tanks may finally get missile firing capability next year. The Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on will be ready with a new indigenous missile for the tank, a top government official told HT on Saturday. The upgrade of Arjun Mk-2 tank suffered a major setback in 2013 after the Israeli missile to be fitted on it failed to meet the army’s requiremen­ts. ››

NEW DELHI: India’s homegrown Ar jun Mk -2 tanks may finally get missile firing capability next year.

The Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on (DR DO) will be ready with a new indigenous missile that can be fired from the tank, a top government official told Hindustan Times on Saturday.

The upgrade of Arjun Mk-2 tank suffered a major setback in 2013 after the Israeli missile to be fitted on it failed to meet the army’s requiremen­ts, delaying the programme by several years.

The indigenous missile is under trials and would be able to meet the army’s requiremen­t of engaging targets at ranges less than 1,200 metres.

The army rejected the Israeli LA HAT( laser homing anti tank) missile, manufactur­ed by the Israeli Aerospace Industries, because it could engage targets only at ranges beyond 1,500 metres.

The LAHAT missiles cost nearly ~20 crore, an expenditur­e dub bed unfruitful by the national auditor in a recent report.

The army initially wanted a missile that could engage targets between 500 metres and 5 km, but later revised the requiremen­t to 1,200 metres and 5km.

Missile firing capability is one of the most significan­t upgrades proposed in the tank. The defence ministry cleared the purchase of 118 Arjun Mk-2 tanks at a cost of more than ₹6,600 crore in 2014.

The DRDO-developed tank is an upgraded version of the Mk-1 variant, 119 of which have been inducted in the army.

The Mk-2 variant is supposed to have nearly 80 improved features over the previous version, including more than 15 major technology upgrades.

The major improvemen­ts on the new tank include better firepower, integrated explosive reactive armour, advanced laser warning and a countermea­sure system among others.

THE INDIGENOUS MISSILE IS UNDER TRIAL AND WOULD BE ABLE TO MEET INDIAN ARMY’S REQUIREMEN­T OF ENGAGING TARGETS AT RANGES LESS THAN 1,200 METRES

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