Wednesday, May 6, 2026
22.1 C
New Delhi

India test fires 3,500-km missile from nuclear submarine

India test fires 3,500-km missile from nuclear submarine

AI image

NEW DELHI: India tested an intermediate-range ballistic missile called K-4, which is designed to hit targets 3,500-km away, from the nuclear-powered submarine INS Arighaat in the Bay of Bengal on Tuesday.There was no official word from the defence ministry on the missile test conducted off the coast of Visakhapatnam from the 6,000-tonne INS Arighaat, which is operated by the tri-service strategic forces command.Sources, however, confirmed the missile was the solid-fuelled K-4, which can carry a two-tonne nuclear payload and is critical for India to strengthen the sea leg of its nuclear weapons triad.”A comprehensive analysis will determine whether Tuesday’s test actually met all laid down technical parameters and mission objectives or revealed some shortcomings. It usually takes several tests for ballistic missiles, especially those launched from submarines, to achieve full operational status,” a source said.After multiple trials from undersea platforms in the shape of submersible pontoons over the last several years, the two-stage K-4 missile was tested for the first time from INS Arighaat in Nov last year.INS Arighaat, the country’s second nuclear-powered submarine with nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles (called SSBN in naval parlance), was commissioned on Aug 29 last year. Her forerunner INS Arihant, which became fully operational in 2018, can carry only the 750-km range K-15 missiles.India will commission its third SSBN as INS Aridhaman in the first quarter of 2026 and the fourth in 2027-28 under the secretive over Rs 90,000 crore ATV (advanced technology vessel) programme launched decades ago. These two SSBNs are slightly larger, with a displacement of 7,000 tonnes each, than the first two 6,000-tonne ones.There is also the plan to eventually build 13,500-tonne SSBNs, with much more powerful 190 MW pressurised light-water reactors instead of the existing 83 MW ones on the first four submarines.India’s existing SSBNs, of course, are less than half the size of the ones with the US, China and Russia. The operational deployment of K-4 missiles, which will be followed by the K-5 and K-6 missiles in the 5,000 to 6,000-km range class, will somewhat help India narrow the huge gap with countries like the US, Russia and China, which have a range of intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).The first two legs of India’s nuclear triad are much more robust, with the land-based ballistic missiles led by the Agni-5 with a strike range of over 5,000 km and fighters like Rafales, Sukhoi-30MKIs and Mirage-2000s capable of delivering nuclear gravity bombs.The SSBNs, however, impart India’s deterrence posture with much more credibility because they are considered the most secure, survivable and potent platforms for retaliatory strikes in line with the country’s “no first-use” policy.

Go to Source

Hot this week

Carlsen and Nakamura’s contrasting career views spark huge debate: ‘That’s why one is champion and other is bullsh***er’

Magnus Carlsen and Hikaru Nakamura gave very contrasting views on their respective careers, sparking a viral debate. Read More

West Bengal verdict: With Mamata’s nemesis Suvendu Adhikari, Amit Shah plotted her downfall

Amit Shah and Suvendu Adhikari (Image/ANI) NEW DELHI: Pitting Suvendu Adhikari — who defeated CM Mamata Banerjee in his turf, Nandigram, in 2021 — against her in Bhabanipur was only the beginning of Union minister Amit Shah’s deter Read More

‘Maintain Continuous Patrolling’: CEC Orders Strict Action As Post-Poll Violence Erupts In West Bengal

After BJPs West Bengal election win, violence and vandalism at TMC offices rise, CEC Gyanesh Kumar warns of strict action and orders top officials to maintain patrols Go to Source Read More

Original Sabarimala PIL should’ve been binned: Supreme Court

NEW DELHI: A nine-judge Supreme Court bench led by CJI Surya Kant on Tuesday said the SC in 2006 should have outrightly “thrown in the dustbin’ the original PIL that led to quashing of Sabarimala Ayyappa Temple custom restricting entr Read More

Topics

Carlsen and Nakamura’s contrasting career views spark huge debate: ‘That’s why one is champion and other is bullsh***er’

Magnus Carlsen and Hikaru Nakamura gave very contrasting views on their respective careers, sparking a viral debate. Read More

West Bengal verdict: With Mamata’s nemesis Suvendu Adhikari, Amit Shah plotted her downfall

Amit Shah and Suvendu Adhikari (Image/ANI) NEW DELHI: Pitting Suvendu Adhikari — who defeated CM Mamata Banerjee in his turf, Nandigram, in 2021 — against her in Bhabanipur was only the beginning of Union minister Amit Shah’s deter Read More

‘Maintain Continuous Patrolling’: CEC Orders Strict Action As Post-Poll Violence Erupts In West Bengal

After BJPs West Bengal election win, violence and vandalism at TMC offices rise, CEC Gyanesh Kumar warns of strict action and orders top officials to maintain patrols Go to Source Read More

Original Sabarimala PIL should’ve been binned: Supreme Court

NEW DELHI: A nine-judge Supreme Court bench led by CJI Surya Kant on Tuesday said the SC in 2006 should have outrightly “thrown in the dustbin’ the original PIL that led to quashing of Sabarimala Ayyappa Temple custom restricting entr Read More

TMC Office In Jagatballavpur Set On Fire By BJP Workers, Alleges Kalyan Banerjee

Kalyan Banerjee alleges BJP workers set ablaze and forcefully occupied a Trinamool Congress party office in Jagatballavpur soon after Bengal election results Go to Source Read More

Blake Lively,Justin Baldoni get no payout; lawyers earn USD 60 million

‘It Ends With Us’ co-stars Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni surprised all when they settled their high-profile lawsuit, just two weeks before going to trial. Read More

Number of Supreme Court judges to rise from 34 to 38

. NEW DELHI: The Cabinet on Tuesday approved a proposal to raise the sanctioned strength of judges in the Supreme Court from the current 33 to 37, excluding the Chief Justice of India. Read More

Related Articles