Business Standard

Pak-aimed Agni-p missile flight-tested successful­ly

Agni-5 to be mainstay of anti-china arsenal, Agni-p deterrent against Pakistan

- AJAI SHUKLA

The Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on (DRDO) successful­ly flight-tested the Agni-p, India’s most technologi­cally advanced, nuclear-capable, ballistic missile from Balasore, Odisha, on Monday.

“Various telemetry and radar stations positioned along the eastern coast tracked and monitored the (Agni P) missile. The missile followed a textbook trajectory, meeting all mission objectives with a high level of accuracy,” stated a Ministry of Defence (MOD) press release.

While the MOD was silent on this, the Agni-p has been developed specifical­ly to strike targets in Pakistan. Its range of 1,000-2,000 kilometres (km) is too short to reach targets in the Chinese mainland, but can comfortabl­y cover all of Pakistan’s territory.

The Agni-p will replace the Prithvi, Agni-1 and Agni-2 missiles in India’s arsenal — missiles that were built two decades ago with technologi­es that are now considered outdated.

While the Agni-p will be the workhorse of the nuclear deterrent against

Pakistan, the Agni-5 will be the mainstay of the anti-china nuclear arsenal.

“Agni-p is a new generation, advanced variant of the Agni class of missiles. It is a canisteris­ed missile with range capability between 1,000 and 2,000 km,” said the MOD.

The Agni-p will enter service as a twostage, solid propellant missile. Both stages will have composite rocket motors and guidance systems with electromec­hanical actuators. The missiles will be guided to their targets by inertial navigation systems (INS) that are based on

advanced ring-laser gyroscopes.

The Agni-p and Agni-5 ballistic missiles trace their origins back to the Integrated Guided Missile Developmen­t Programme (IGMDP) that the then DRDO chief, Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, launched in the early 1980s.

The first missile built under the IGMDP was the liquid fuelled, singlestag­e Prithvi, which could drop a nuclear bomb with moderate accuracy on a target 150-250 km away.

Next to come were the two-stage Agni-1 and Agni-2 missiles that had convention­al “maraging steel” fuselages, older propellant­s, hydraulic actuation systems that were vulnerable to leaks and far less accurate navigation systems.

A major technology leap took place with the Agni-4 missile in 2011, in which the DRDO first tested technologi­es that were being developed for years. These included on-board computers based on the Power PC platform, and avionics changes involving integrated technologi­es. By combining several avionics packages into one, the designers improved reliabilit­y and saved space and weight by reducing cabling and harnesses.

The Agni-4 also incorporat­ed composite rocket motors, high-energy propellant­s, electro-mechanical actuators and ring-laser gyro-based navigation systems that could guide a ballistic missile to a target thousands of miles away, striking it within a few hundred metres.

Increased accuracy in ballistic missiles allows them to deliver relatively lower-yield nuclear bombs, thereby reducing collateral damage. A former DRDO chief told Business Standard: “Megaton warheads were essential for destroying targets in the days when accuracies were low. Now we talk of accuracy of a few hundred metres. That allows a smaller warhead, perhaps 150-250 kilotons, to cause unacceptab­le damage.”

The DRDO believes that the cutting-edge technologi­es developed for the Agni-4 and Agni-5 missiles, which have now been reverse-engineered into the Agni-p, are as advanced as those in intermedia­te range ballistic missiles (IRBMS) anywhere.

Many of these systems were developed by the Research Centre Imarat, a DRDO laboratory that was headed for many years by Satheesh Reddy, now the DRDO chief.

Being a canisteris­ed missile, the Agnip can be transporte­d easily by road or railway and fired at very short notice.

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