India tests Agni-5 missile capable of deploying multiple warheads

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Last updated on: March 11, 2024 22:16 IST

India on Monday successfully carried out the first flight test of indigenously developed Agni-5 missile, capable of deploying multiple warheads, under its 'Mission Divyastra', joining a select group of nations having such a capability.

PLEASE NOTE: This image of New Generation Agni P Ballistic Missile is used only for representation. Photograph: ANI Photo

The missile with 'multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicle' tested from APJ Abdul Kalam Island in Odisha accomplished the designed parameters, the defence ministry said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Defence Minister Rajnath Singh congratulated the scientists of the Defence Research and Development Organisation for the successful test.

 

"Proud of our DRDO scientists for Mission Divyastra, the first flight test of indigenously developed Agni-5 missile with Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry Vehicle technology," Modi said on 'X'.

The director of 'Mission Divyastra' is a woman scientist.

The MIRV feature ensures that a single missile can deploy multiple warheads at different locations, sources said.

Agni-V missile has a range of up to 5,000 km and it can bring almost the entire Asia including the northernmost part of China as well as some regions in Europe under its striking range.

India has already carried out a number of tests of Agni 5 but it was for the first time that the flight test was carried out with MIRV.

The countries that have missiles with MIRV capabilities are the US, Russia, the UK, China and France.

"The DRDO conducted the first successful flight test of indigenously developed Agni-5 missile with Multiple Independently Targetable Re-Entry Vehicle ( MIRV) technology.

"The flight test named 'Mission Divyastra' was carried out from Dr APJ Abdul Kalam Island in Odisha," the defence ministry said in a brief statement.

"Various telemetry and radar stations tracked and monitored multiple re-entry vehicles," it said.

The defence minister termed the flight test as an "exceptional success".

India "joined the select group of nations who have MIRV (Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry) capability," Singh said on X

"Congratulations to our @DRDO_India scientists and the entire team for this exceptional success. India is proud of them!" he said.

The weapon system is equipped with indigenous avionics systems and high-accuracy sensor packages, which ensured that the re-entry vehicles reached the target points within the desired accuracy, the sources said.

The capability is an enunciator of India's growing technological prowess, they added.

The Agni 1 to 4 missiles have ranges from 700 km to 3,500 km and they have already been deployed.

In April last year, India successfully carried out the maiden flight trial of an endo-atmospheric interceptor missile from a ship off the coast of Odisha in the Bay of Bengal as part of its ambitious ballistic missile defence programme.

The purpose of the trial of the sea-based missile was to engage and neutralize a hostile ballistic missile threat thereby elevating India into an elite club of nations having such a capability.

India has been developing capabilities to intercept hostile ballistic missiles both inside and outside the earth's atmospheric limits.

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