India successfully test-fires long-range interceptor missile

27 Apr, 2014 13:14 / Updated 11 years ago

New Delhi upped the strategic ante as it successfully test-fired a new interceptor capable of destroying incoming long-range missiles, a move that will not go unnoticed by rival nuclear-armed neighbors, China and Pakistan.

India’s Advanced Air Defence (AAD) interceptor missile on Sunday successfully intercepted an incoming surface-to-surface ballistic missile fired from a ship off the coast in the Bay of Bengal.

"The test was successful," test range director M.V.K.V. Prasad told IANS. "It is the first time that we have successfully conducted the test of an exo-atmospheric interceptor," he said.

The test is part of double-tiered missile defense system that India’s military hopes will provide a multi-layered defense system against any potential ballistic missile strike.

“It is a system to intercept enemy missiles with a range of 2,000 kilometers,” Avinash Chander, the director-general of the Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO), said last week. “The missiles will get intercepted at range of more than 100 kilometers away, so that damage to our cities can be prevented.”

DRDO has already successfully tested six interceptor missiles, both in endo-atmosphere (within 30 km altitude above sea level) and exo-atmosphere stage (above 30 km altitude).

The Prithvi Air Defense interceptor missile has already demonstrated its killing capability at an altitude of 50 km and 80 km, while the AAD interceptor has successfully neutralized targets at an altitude of 15 km to 30 km.

The next step for Indian military technicians is to be able to destroy targets at an altitude of above 100 km, defense sources told Reuters.

The test moves India closer to membership in a small group of countries – the United States, Russia and Israel – which possess anti-ballistic missile technologies.

At the same time, the test will arouse suspicion among regional powers China and Pakistan, neighboring nuclear powers that in the past have experienced military confrontations with India.

At least part of the region’s militarization is related to aggressive moves on the part of the United States, which has moved the bulk of its naval forces into the Pacific region. This decision has triggered something of a domino effect, as heightened Chinese apprehension has prompted Beijing to beef up its capabilities, thus putting pressure on India and Pakistan.

Indeed, due to the geopolitical shakeup, there has been political pressure for India to rethink its nuclear doctrine that states New Delhi would not be the first to use nuclear weapons in any future theoretical confrontation.