http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/industry-and-economy/article3390480.ece?homepage=true
New Delhi , May 6:
India has developed a missile defence shield which can be put in place at short
notice to protect at least two cities, bringing the country on par with an
elite group of few nations.
The shield, developed by DRDO, has been tested successfully and an incoming
ballistic missile with the range of up to 2,000 km can be destroyed. The system
is to be upgraded to the range of 5,000 kms by 2016.
“The Ballistic Missile Defence shield is now mature...We are ready to put
phase one in place and it can be put in very short time,” the DRDO chief, V.K.
Saraswat, told PTI here in an interview.
He said the shield, as part of phase one of the programme, can be put in
place at two places in the country, where the infrastructure is available.
However, the two places have not yet been identified and the selection will
be made at the political level.
The DRDO used variants of Prithvi missiles as simulated targets and
successfully intercepted missiles in test—firings.
“We have carried out six successful launches and demonstrated the
capability for 2,000 km targets...We have demonstrated it in two layers that is
endo—atmospheric (inside the Earth’s atmosphere) and exo—atmospheric (outside
the Earth’s atmosphere),” Saraswat said.
He said all the elements such as long—range radars and tracking devices,
real—time datalink and mission control system required for the missile system
have been “realised” successfully.
Under phase two of the project, the premier defence research agency would
upgrade the system to handle ballistic missiles with range of 5,000 km. This
phase is expected to be ready by 2016.
The system required for phase-II of the project is being developed, he
said, adding that for this purpose, ships are being built from where the target
missiles would be launched.
The DRDO chief said phase two is expected to be completed by 2016.
Talking about the advancement of the system, Saraswat said the missile
defence shield has been “automated” to an extent where human intervention would
be required only if the mission has to be aborted.
The DRDO chief said the Indian missile defence system is comparable with
the US Patriot 3 system, which was successfully used during the 1990 Gulf War
against Iraq .
As part of its efforts to protect itself from enemy missiles, India is
developing this two-tier BMD which can intercept enemy missiles at altitudes of
80 km and 150 km.
The DRDO is thinking of intercepting the missiles at higher altitudes as it
would give it more response time in case the first attempt is a miss and the
second layer of the system can be put into action.
The system was first testfired in November 2006 elevating India into the elite club of countries to have
successfully developed an anti-ballistic missile system, after United States , Russia
and Israel
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