The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)
Pakistan test fires nuclear-capable submarine cruise missile
PAKISTAN MONDAY successfully test-fired its first Submarine-launched Cruise Missile capable of carrying a nuclear warhead up to 450 km, with the military saying the strategic weapon has given the country a “credible” secondstrike capability.
The missile, Babur-3, was fired from an underwater, mobile platform from an undisclosed location in the Indian Ocean and hit its target with precise accuracy, the Inter Services Public Relations, the media wing of the Pakistani military said in a statement.
Babur-3 is a sea-based variant of Ground Launched Cruise Missile (GLCM) Babur-2, which was successfully tested earlier in December, last year. The Babur-3 SLCM incorporates state-of-the-art technologies including underwater controlled propulsion and advanced guidance and navigation features, duly augmented by Global Navigation, Terrain and Scene Matching Systems.
The missile features terrain hugging and sea skimming flight capabilities to evade hostile radars and air defenses, in addition to certain stealth technologies, in an emerging regional Ballistic Missile Defence (BMD) environment, the release said.
Babur-3 SLCM in land-attack mode, is capable of delivering various types of payloads and will provide Pakistan with a “credible second-strike capability, augmenting deterrence,” the statement said.
While the pursuit and now the successful attainment of a second strike capability by Pakistan represents a major scientific milestone, it is the manifestation of the strategy of measured response to nuclear strategies and postures being adopted in Pakistan’s neighbourhood, it said, in an obvious reference to India.
Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif congratulated the nation and the military on the first successful test-fire of the SLCM.
“The successful test of Babur-3 is a manifestation of Pakistan’s technological progress and self-reliance,” his office said in a statement.
Sharif added that Pakistan has always maintained the policy of peaceful co-existence but this test is a step towards reinforcing the policy of credible minimum deterrence.