The Asian Age

India’s ICBM Agni V to soon be inducted in strategic units

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

With a strike range of more than 5,000 km, India’s most powerful missile till date, Agni- V, will be inducted soon.

Capable of carrying nuclear warheads, the interconti­nental ballistic missile system ( ICBM) will be inducted into the elite Strategic Forces Command ( SFC), official sources told PTI.

The sources said a series of user trials are now being conducted before the missile is handed over to the SFC. Only last month, the Agni- V was successful­ly test- fired off the Odisha coast, and the sources said a number of other pre- induction tests are being planned in the next few weeks.

The induction of the Agni- V will significan­tly strengthen India’s military capability as a 5,000km range missile will bring many prominent cities, including China’s Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Hong Kong, within India’s striking range.

“It is a strategic asset which will act as a deterrent. We are at the fag end of the strategic project,” said an official who is part of the Agni- V programme. The missile is being inducted at a time when India’s neighbourh­ood is witnessing evolving security threats.

Agni- V is the fifth missile in a series after Agni I ( 700 km range), Agni II

( 2,000 km range), Agni III ( 2,500 km range) and Agni IV ( 3,500 km range).

The Agni series is a brainchild of the extended Integrated Guided Missile Developmen­t Project ( IGMDP), a project called off in 2008 after achieving the programme’s stated objectives. Further developmen­ts continued for enhancing range and mobility. Very few countries have ICBMs. These are the United States, Russia, China, France and North Korea.

As part of its efforts to enhance the country’s defence capabiliti­es, the government is also working on several key projects, including integratin­g the Brahmos supersonic cruise missile on 40 Sukhoi combat aircraft. A fleet of 40 Sukhoi jets is undergoing structural modificati­ons at the Hindustan Aeronautic­s Ltd ( HAL) facility for integratio­n with the missiles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India