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Akash Missile Draws Global Interest Including Thailand, Belarus and Indonesia Among Others

Major Shaitan Singh

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India's Akash Missile Capable Of Kill At 30-Meter Altitude; Finds Takers Abroad Too

Indian Army has inducted its first Akash Surface-To-Air Missile System that boasts of a kill range as low as 30 meters in altitude. The first regiment of the Akash missiles will be deployed at the Amritsar airfield in Punjab along the borders with Pakistan.

It has also found takers among friendly foreign nations such as Thailand and Belarus, which have shown and expressed interest in acquiring the Akash missile system.

Akash is now being produced, after over two decades of Defense Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) work, with contribution from 61 Indian public and private sector companies. Among them are Bharat Dynamics Limited (BDL), Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL), BEML, Midhani, Electronics Corporation of India Limited (ECIL), Ordnance Factory Board, Tata Power SED, L&T, TAL and Balchand Industries.
ak.jpg
The missile system's keys were received by Army chief General Dalbir Singh on May 5, 2015 here from BDL Chairman and Managing Director V.Udaya Bhaskar to mark its formal induction. Singh handed over the keys to Army Air Defense Director General Lieutenant General V.K.Saxena, in the presence of BEL Chairman and Managing Director S.K.Sharma and DRDO's Director General Missiles and Strategic Systems V.G.Sekaran.
"Akash's distinction is its kill range.

It is designed to kill adversaries at an altitude as low as 30 meters to as high as 18 to 20 km," Udaya Bhaskar said at the event.

The all-weather missile, enjoying high immunity against active and passive jamming, can target multiple threats from helicopters, combat planes and unmanned aerial vehicles. The fully automatic system is easily adaptable to existing and futuristic air defense environment and is highly mobile by road and rail system for quick mobilization and deployment.

Akash, with an inbuilt 'Identification Friend or Foe' safety features, was designed by Defense Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) as part of the Integrated Guided Missile Development Program. India has already successfully developed, produced and deployed the air force version of Akash. Taking off from that experience, it re-engineered the missile to meet the qualitative requirements of the Army for a surface-to-air missile system.

BDL produces the army-version of the missile and 20 per cent of the missile's critical components in value. BEL, the production agency of the missile's air force version, provides the Phased Array Radar. BEML supplies the Tatra trucks for the missile, radar and control station for the entire system. The command and control platform is supplied by the ECIL.

The Army had visualized the Akash missile's qualitative requirements two decades ago and after facing several challenges, setbacks and failures in its development journey, the missile has been successfully validated in all its configurations -- far boundary high altitude, near boundary low altitudes, cross over targets, incoming and outgoing targets.

The Army has placed a Rs.19,000 crore order for two regiments of the Akash missile. But, BDL is hoping for more orders to come in the near future, due to the massive air defense requirement faced by the army to protect its strategic assets, vital installations, vulnerable areas and points, all along the Indian borders with traditional rivals, Pakistan and China.

Sekaran noted that the Akash missile is comparable to any other air defense missile of this class, with its multiple target tracking ability, network interface that would be important in a network-centric warfare of the future, and engagement of targets at supersonic speeds.

"The Akash missile has a vast potential in the overall framework for Army Air Defense. It has given us confidence on our indigenous systems leading to production, being 96 per cent indigenous," Sekaran said.
"The army version of the Akash missile was quickly re-engineered from the air force version, within two years. It met all the qualitative requirements of the army, which is not an easy task, considering that the modifications from the air force version," he said.

The best take away from the Akash experience for DRDO is the coordinated work with other agencies, including the users. "The DRDO is currently working with the Army on on several other missile systems such as Quick Reaction SAMs and Anti-Tank Guided Missiles. Akash model can be applied to the new projects too. We will try to provide what Army needs in a short period of time or within time," he said.
Saxena, in his remarks noted that Akash missile development journey had been "long and arduous, replete with numerous challenges, setback, failures, cost and time overruns.

"At the end of it all, the missile system has been realized. Akash will now provide area air defense cover for Army's strategic assets, critical for achieving the war potential of the Army," he said.

The army version of the Akash missile went through a three-stage limited validation trials -- system integration trials at Original Equipment Manufacuturer location, integration trials at missile test facility as a whole system, and firing of the missile system at multiple targets. It also went through several other quality trials before being declared ready for induction.

Saxena said with the Akash missile system going through production now, the Army was in the process of creating storage and deployment facilities at relevant locations.
The first set of Akash missiles will be deployed by the 27 Air Defense Regiment based at Amritsar air field, he said.

"A number of countries have shown interest in Akash, such as Thailand and Belarus. This shows Akash is a world class contemporary weapon system," India's Defense Production Special Secretary Ashok Kumar Gupta said.

The indigenous missile system perfectly fits into the Narendra Modi government's 'Make in India' initiative, he added.

With the participation of such a large number of Indian public and private sector companies in the Akash program, a good eco-system for the missiles has been established, he said.
The Army chief described the Akash missile system as the "most attractive and sleek piece of weapon" he had seen.

"It marks the beginning of a new era for the Indian Army and the Army Air Defense in terms of modernization," Dalbir Singh said.

The Army Air Defense modernization, he said, is being addressed through upgrade of existing weapons and induction of new short, medium and long range weapons. Army is also in the process of revamping the command and control and the battle management system.

"India is a power house and will play a major role in the new world order. If that is so, we have to be ready to take up challenges. In fact, air attacks have gone beyond deployment of helicopters and aircraft and hence, we require a modern air defense. It has been one of the seven critical areas of focus under the army modernization program," he said.

India's Defence Goal by Nayeem Sheikh
 
Akash1.jpg


India's Akash Missile Capable Of Kill At 30-Meter Altitude; Finds Takers Abroad Too

Indian Army has inducted its first Akash Surface-To-Air Missile System that boasts of a kill range as low as 30 meters in altitude. The first regiment of the Akash missiles will be deployed at the Amritsar airfield in Punjab along the borders with Pakistan.

It has also found takers among friendly foreign nations such as Thailand and Belarus, which have shown and expressed interest in acquiring the Akash missile system.

Akash is now being produced, after over two decades of Defense Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) work, with contribution from 61 Indian public and private sector companies. Among them are Bharat Dynamics Limited (BDL), Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL), BEML, Midhani, Electronics Corporation of India Limited (ECIL), Ordnance Factory Board, Tata Power SED, L&T, TAL and Balchand Industries.
ak.jpg
The missile system's keys were received by Army chief General Dalbir Singh on May 5, 2015 here from BDL Chairman and Managing Director V.Udaya Bhaskar to mark its formal induction. Singh handed over the keys to Army Air Defense Director General Lieutenant General V.K.Saxena, in the presence of BEL Chairman and Managing Director S.K.Sharma and DRDO's Director General Missiles and Strategic Systems V.G.Sekaran.
"Akash's distinction is its kill range.

It is designed to kill adversaries at an altitude as low as 30 meters to as high as 18 to 20 km," Udaya Bhaskar said at the event.

The all-weather missile, enjoying high immunity against active and passive jamming, can target multiple threats from helicopters, combat planes and unmanned aerial vehicles. The fully automatic system is easily adaptable to existing and futuristic air defense environment and is highly mobile by road and rail system for quick mobilization and deployment.

Akash, with an inbuilt 'Identification Friend or Foe' safety features, was designed by Defense Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) as part of the Integrated Guided Missile Development Program. India has already successfully developed, produced and deployed the air force version of Akash. Taking off from that experience, it re-engineered the missile to meet the qualitative requirements of the Army for a surface-to-air missile system.

BDL produces the army-version of the missile and 20 per cent of the missile's critical components in value. BEL, the production agency of the missile's air force version, provides the Phased Array Radar. BEML supplies the Tatra trucks for the missile, radar and control station for the entire system. The command and control platform is supplied by the ECIL.

The Army had visualized the Akash missile's qualitative requirements two decades ago and after facing several challenges, setbacks and failures in its development journey, the missile has been successfully validated in all its configurations -- far boundary high altitude, near boundary low altitudes, cross over targets, incoming and outgoing targets.

The Army has placed a Rs.19,000 crore order for two regiments of the Akash missile. But, BDL is hoping for more orders to come in the near future, due to the massive air defense requirement faced by the army to protect its strategic assets, vital installations, vulnerable areas and points, all along the Indian borders with traditional rivals, Pakistan and China.

Sekaran noted that the Akash missile is comparable to any other air defense missile of this class, with its multiple target tracking ability, network interface that would be important in a network-centric warfare of the future, and engagement of targets at supersonic speeds.

"The Akash missile has a vast potential in the overall framework for Army Air Defense. It has given us confidence on our indigenous systems leading to production, being 96 per cent indigenous," Sekaran said.
"The army version of the Akash missile was quickly re-engineered from the air force version, within two years. It met all the qualitative requirements of the army, which is not an easy task, considering that the modifications from the air force version," he said.

The best take away from the Akash experience for DRDO is the coordinated work with other agencies, including the users. "The DRDO is currently working with the Army on on several other missile systems such as Quick Reaction SAMs and Anti-Tank Guided Missiles. Akash model can be applied to the new projects too. We will try to provide what Army needs in a short period of time or within time," he said.
Saxena, in his remarks noted that Akash missile development journey had been "long and arduous, replete with numerous challenges, setback, failures, cost and time overruns.

"At the end of it all, the missile system has been realized. Akash will now provide area air defense cover for Army's strategic assets, critical for achieving the war potential of the Army," he said.

The army version of the Akash missile went through a three-stage limited validation trials -- system integration trials at Original Equipment Manufacuturer location, integration trials at missile test facility as a whole system, and firing of the missile system at multiple targets. It also went through several other quality trials before being declared ready for induction.

Saxena said with the Akash missile system going through production now, the Army was in the process of creating storage and deployment facilities at relevant locations.
The first set of Akash missiles will be deployed by the 27 Air Defense Regiment based at Amritsar air field, he said.

"A number of countries have shown interest in Akash, such as Thailand and Belarus. This shows Akash is a world class contemporary weapon system," India's Defense Production Special Secretary Ashok Kumar Gupta said.

The indigenous missile system perfectly fits into the Narendra Modi government's 'Make in India' initiative, he added.

With the participation of such a large number of Indian public and private sector companies in the Akash program, a good eco-system for the missiles has been established, he said.
The Army chief described the Akash missile system as the "most attractive and sleek piece of weapon" he had seen.

"It marks the beginning of a new era for the Indian Army and the Army Air Defense in terms of modernization," Dalbir Singh said.

The Army Air Defense modernization, he said, is being addressed through upgrade of existing weapons and induction of new short, medium and long range weapons. Army is also in the process of revamping the command and control and the battle management system.

"India is a power house and will play a major role in the new world order. If that is so, we have to be ready to take up challenges. In fact, air attacks have gone beyond deployment of helicopters and aircraft and hence, we require a modern air defense. It has been one of the seven critical areas of focus under the army modernization program," he said.

India's Defence Goal by Nayeem Sheikh

To be honest - Akash SAM isn't a lucrative export offer - It's too bulky at 720 Kg to be a short range 25 Km Air Defense Missile - Land based version of Barak-8/LR-SAM offers an operational range of 70 km weighing as low as 275 kg. And Akash isn't canistered as well.
 
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@Chanakya's_Chant

The advantage of Akash system is that due to highly powerfull radar, its not prone to jamming by incoming Aircraft. Once missile is its tail, aircraft will find it difficult to escape. One more thing, Akash only engages four targets at a time with the doctrain to launch a couple of missiles simultaniously against one target. These characteristics will make a kill more probable.

Every SAM has its own advantages & disadvantages. Thats why everyone finds its own market based on threat perception.

@Chanakya's_Chant

The advantage of Akash system is that due to highly powerfull radar, its not prone to jamming by incoming Aircraft. Once missile is its tail, aircraft will find it difficult to escape. One more thing, Akash only engages four targets at a time with the doctrain to launch a couple of missiles simultaniously against one target. These characteristics will make a kill more probable.

Every SAM has its own advantages & disadvantages. Thats why everyone finds its own market based on threat perception.
 
It a Typo one should understand !! Thank you for pointing out

Weight 720KM - but one should understand! Sure - Indian Media, Indian Authors - we need to have sympathy with them - their journalism and reporting abilities are rudimentary.
 
To be honest - Akash SAM isn't a lucrative export offer - It's too bulky at 720 Kg to be a short range 25 Km Air Defense Missile - Land based version of Barak-8/LR-SAM offers an operational range of 70 km weighing as low as 275 kg. And Akash isn't canistered as well.
lol range again? Its cheap, you can have multiple batteries and radars to cover the same area as S-300 would and on land, that accounts for more indepth coverage since a single radar can not look over ridges or blind spots. Range is only an issue at sea at times and expecially when it to ABM tracing and killing.
S-300 was developed for Russia whom has a large area and usually flat land. India doesn't have a that, we need quantity to deny air in wartime from mountians to hills. Only flat land in India is Punjab and Rajasthan.
 
To be honest - Akash SAM isn't a lucrative export offer - It's too bulky at 720 Kg to be a short range 25 Km Air Defense Missile - Land based version of Barak-8/LR-SAM offers an operational range of 70 km weighing as low as 275 kg. And Akash isn't canistered as well.

actually it is not..Akash is a versatile missile which can not only engages various kind of threats,it can do so at various type of altitude.You've to understand,18 km is quite a reach,and the range is deceiving.No country provides accurate info on SAM's range and altitude it can engage..I guess India only provided approximate tail chase range and not the slant range.Also,Akash can engage multiple target simultaneously,which you've to consider.

I'm giving one example...

SA-6,the missile Akash resembles a lot had weight of 600 kg,but it could engage some 25 kg and about 3.5- 14 km(later versions) altitude at most,with an warhead of some 55 kg.

BUK,which Russia,China and India as well as multiple countries still use has same spec,though Buk can't engage over 14000 m.

You can see Dvina weighs nearly 3.5 times,yet has range of 45 km,warhead of 200 kg and reach upto 25 km altitude.

even Chinese copy of Dvina weighs 900 kg,which is a new missile.

weight of a missile generally not the main criteria in case of SAM.its performance and level of accuracy is main issue.
 
Akash is cheap, and the army variant allows for protection of convoys. What I would like to see is radars mounted on helium balloons to increase detection range. 40 KM range with mach speeds is great especially if with slight changes you can increase range of the missile. Big breakthrough would be if the missile can be used as an air launched ASM since it uses the same technology for rockets as Kh-31. Also if the army version could engage ground targets like tanks, if the radar could clear the ground cluster.
 

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