Signalling India’s readiness to deploy the home-grown Ballistic Missile
Defence (BMD) system in the near future, an advanced interceptor missile
destroyed an incoming target missile in a direct hit at an altitude of
15 km over the Bay of Bengal on November 23.
In this mission, missile technologists from the Defence Research and
Development Organisation (DRDO) for the first time tested the
configuration for destroying an incoming actual missile and another
electronically simulated missile.
According to top DRDO sources, the electronically simulated target which
mimicked a missile coming from a distance of 1500 km, was
electronically hit at an altitude of 120 km.
Within minutes of the launch of the real attacker missile, a modified
surface-to-surface Prithvi from Chandipur, the actual interceptor ,
Advanced Air Defence (AAD) missile took off from Wheeler Island and
destroyed the ‘hostile’ missile at an altitude of 15 km in the
endo-atmosphere at 12.52 p.m.
As soon as target missile was launched, the Long-Range Tracking Radars
and the Multi-Functional Radars tracked it and passed on the data to the
guidance computer to launch the AAD, which homed on to the target
missile and pulverised it.
Scientific Advisor to Defence Minister V.K. Saraswat, Chief Controller,
(Missiles and Strategic Systems), Avinash Chander, Associate Director,
Research Centre Imarat, Sateesh Reddy and Programme Director, (AD
Mission) Adalat Ali were present.
Celebrations broke out at Wheeler Island following the success of the
mission, which was the eighth ballistic interceptor missile test. So far
seven missions have been successful and one of them, the first one was
conducted in exo-atmopshere at an altitude of 48 km in November 2006.
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