Friday, April 17, 2015

Pakistan Tests Ballistic Missile


 

For the first time since 2012, Pakistan tests a nuclear-capable medium-range ballistic missile.

The Pakistani military successfully test-fired a medium-range ballistic missile (MRBM) this Wednesday.

The nuclear-capable Ghauri MRBM (aka Hatf-V), developed by Khan Research Laboratories under the Pakistani-integrated missile research and development program, is allegedly a variation of North Korea’s Rodong-1 missile.

The test was conducted by the Strategic Missile Group of the Army Strategic Forces Command (ASFC). “The training launch of the Ghauri missile system was aimed at testing operational and technical readiness,” the military said in a statement.

The head of the Strategic Plans Division, Lt. Gen. Zubair Mahmood Hayat, congratulated the scientists, engineers, and all ranks of the strategic forces, expressing his satisfaction with the “excellent standard” displayed by Pakistan’s strategic forces.

It appears that the test involved a Ghauri-I MRBM with a range of 1,300 kilometers (807 miles) and the capacity to carry up to a 700 kilogram conventional or nuclear warhead. The missile was launched from a transporter erector launcher on the Tilla Test Range in Jhelum District, Pakistan, according to army-technology.com.

Pakistan also fields the Ghauri-II MRBM, with a maximum range of 2,300 kilometers. The development of a third variant, the Ghauri-III, with a range of up to 3,000 kilometers, has been abandoned for unknown reasons. The last test of a Ghauri MRBM occurred in November 2012.

Back then, various Pakistani experts voiced concerns that the missile may not be capable of carrying a nuclear warhead and that it also might not be the ideal weapon of choice for Pakistan’s nuclear deterrent vis-à-vis India and other operational needs. Mansoor Ahmed, a lecturer in the Department of Defense and Strategic Studies at Quaid-e-Azam University, noted:

 Unlike solid-fueled missiles, liquid-fueled ballistic missiles cannot store the fuel for long periods and have to be refueled prior to launch, which takes several hours, thus making them vulnerable to first strikes. Given the relative lack of Pakistan’s strategic depth, such systems are not the first choice in missile systems for nuclear warhead delivery, which explains why the Ghauri remains the only liquid-fueled system in its missile inventory.

However, testing liquid-fueled missiles is a cheaper alternative to solid-fueled MRBMs when testing launch and control systems, he acknowledged.

Islamabad did not have to wait long for New Delhi’s reaction. The following day, April 15, the Indian Army’s Strategic Forces Command successfully tested the nuclear-capable Agni-III surface-to-surface missile from Wheeler Island, off of the Odisha coast.

According to army-technology.com, the Agni-III is “a two-stage intermediate-range ballistic missile designed to intercept targets located at a distance of 3,500km to 5,000km.”

Tensions between India and Pakistan are higher than usual since last Friday, when Islamabad released on bail Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, the alleged mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai attacks

By Franz-Stefan Gady for The Diplomat

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