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ICBM tests like India's are routine and expected. Well, most of them are

The Ronin

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If the world appears to be a tableau of endless ballistic missile tests of late, there is ample evidence to point to increasingly militarized nations hurling rockets across the sky.

Over the past year, countries that are beholden to international treaties -- and some that are banned from most kinds of missile attempts -- have been test firing ballistic missiles.
The latest nation to join the slew of recent missile launchers is India, which on Thursday said it successfully test-fired a long-range intercontinental ballistic missile [ICBM]. Experts said the weapon was capable of reaching China, a country India is in an ongoing economic and political battle with for regional dominance.
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India tests-fires Agni-V, a nuclear-capable ICBM

India's defense ministry called the test of its nuclear-capable Agni-V missile a "major boost" to the country's defense capabilities.
Defense experts, however, say that this type of testing of missiles is routine and expected. What's different today is North Korea. The reclusive regime has accelerated its bid to attain nuclear status. In the past year, it went into overdrive, firing 23 missiles in 16 tests, and those tests bring the world ever closer to the dangerous prospect of a nuclear missile strike.
False alarms and wrong buttons
Japanese citizens had been living in a state of high alert through most of the past year when just this week public broadcaster NHK issued an alert to phone users with the NHK app installed on their devices telling them that Pyongyang had likely launched a missile that might be headed their way. Past North Korean missiles soared over Japan and landed in waters off the Japanese coast.
But this time, the order for people to go underground in anticipation of a possible strike was a mistake. NHK issued an on-air apology within minutes.
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"pushed the wrong button."
"If that alarm had gone off a year ago, the reaction would have been: a stupid person hit the wrong button," said Steve Hildreth, a specialist in US and foreign national security programs at the Congressional Research Service in Washington, D.C. "But right now, people believe North Korea has the ability to send a missile to Hawaii, and that's played into the reactions to the false alarm."
"For decades, we've lived with the possibility of nuclear conflict in the [Asia-Pacific] region, that North Korea's missiles have a short range capability to carry nuclear weapons," said Hildreth, who specializes in missile defense, missile proliferation and national security. "The game changer is now the threat of North Korea being able to hit the US directly. That's what all this major concern is, and that's less than a year old."
'It's pretty routine'
The US, Russia and China have all reportedly test-fired ballistic missiles in 2017. Pyongyang is banned from doing so under United Nations sanctions.
"It was not unusual to do several test launches a year. We'd pick random missiles from the field, pull it out of there, take the warheads out and ship it to our test range," said Paul Merzlak, a former ICBM crew commander and now editorial director at Naval Institute Press. "You have to do it to make sure the stuff works the way you want it to, so even for someone like us, [the US military], we're still testing these things."
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tests defense systems as well as ballistic missiles at its site north of Santa Barbara in California.
Hildreth says the Santa Barbara site runs tests several times a year. "It's pretty routine what they do," he told CNN. "Both the US and Russia continue to modernize and test our ICBMs."
India is believed to have around 120 to 130 nuclear warheads in its arsenal, according to the Federation of American Scientists, compared to the several thousand in the US stockpile.
Its latest test didn't demonstrate any "new capability," according to Vipiin Narang, associate professor of political science at MIT, but was "simply a developmental test before India inducts it into operational range."
It may have been a routine exercise for New Delhi, but the test would likely strain relations with Beijing, which has been in a protracted border dispute with India over the Himalayan region of Doklam.
In Iran, meanwhile, ballistic missile tests continue to the ire of the US, Israel and other nations that had pushed for greater sanctions against Tehran and the inclusion of ballistic missile programs as part of the nuclear accord.
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Iran successfully tested a new ballistic missile mere hours after unveiling the weapon in a military parade in the streets of Tehran. Called the Khorramshahr missile, the weapon has a range of 1,250 miles (2,000 kilometers) and can carry multiple warheads, according to Press TV. It is said to be easily capable of reaching both Saudi Arabia and Israel.
US President Donald Trump, who has criticized the nuclear accord for not doing more to curb Iran's ballistic missile program, nevertheless agreed to waive key sanctions that the US lifted as part of the deal. Last year, he had argued that Iran was violating the agreement and wanted to establish sanctions that would be instituted if Iran continued to launch ballistic missiles.
One part of the world where missile launches were not routine, however, was in Yemen.
In November, Saudi Arabia successfully intercepted a ballistic missile over its capital, fired by Houthi rebels in Yemen who had targeted the international airport in Riyadh. Another fired in December targeted a residential area south of the capital. The Saudis say they intercepted that one as well. They and the US blame the Iranian regime for supplying the weapons, claiming Hezbollah militants smuggled the Iranian-modified Scud missiles to the rebels in Yemen from Iran.
The tests will continue
Hildreth said that since Kim Jong Un came to power, the regime in Pyongyang has "greatly accelerated the pace" of its missile tests. That is unlikely to abate until North Korea achieves its ambition of nuclear capability.
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North Korea is potentially pausing its program to take part in the Winter Olympics in Seoul.
"I would be very surprised if North Korea did not continue testing its long-range ballistic missiles by the end of this spring," Hildreth said.

http://edition.cnn.com/2018/01/18/a...8india-ballistic-test-normal-intl1057AMVODtop
 
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I hope North Korea also tests an ICBM and the world embraces with it open arms similar to Gangadesh's
 
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There's nothing more predictable than an Indian ballistic missile test.
We do it every year. This year was V's term.
 
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I hope North Korea also tests an ICBM and the world embraces with it open arms similar to Gangadesh's

The world would have if they were not directed against US and its allies.
 
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.....but china can stop this. What is the point of testing it?
 
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ASIA PACIFIC
India Tests Ballistic Missile, Posing New Threat to China
查看简体中文版
查看繁體中文版


By KAI SCHULTZ and HARI KUMARJAN. 18, 2018

  • a long-range ballistic missile capable of carrying nuclear weapons on Thursday, paving the way for membership to a small list of countries with access to intercontinental missiles and putting most of China in its reach.

    The ballistic missile, called Agni 5, was launched from Abdul Kalam Island, off Odisha State in eastern India on Thursday morning, traveling for around 19 minutes and 3,000 miles. In a statement, the Indian Ministry of Defense said that all objectives of the mission had been “successfully met.”

    The firing of the Agni-5 comes months after the official end of a standoffbetween China and India over a remote sliver of land in the Himalayas, a squabble that lasted for more than two months and that was one of the worst border disputes between the countries in 30 years. The launch also comes during a tense period in India’s troubled relationship with Pakistan, its nuclear-armed neighbor.

    Nitin A. Gokhale, an independent national security analyst in New Delhi, said India did not previously have a missile capable of hitting “high-value targets” in China. But Thursday’s successful launch of the Agni 5 has changed the calculus, he said, putting most of China, including major eastern coastal cities such as Shanghai, in reach.

    “If there are hostilities, and if there are contingencies, then India has something which can deter China or at least make China think twice,” he said

The Agni 5 — Agni means fire in Hindi — is about 55 feet long and was developed in India. It is the most advanced missile in the Agni series, with a strike range of more than 3,000 miles and a payload of 1.5 tons, which is enough to transport a fusion-boosted fission weapon, a type of nuclear device.

Coming after four previous tests, Thursday’s firing of the Agni 5 took India closer to incorporating the missile into its Strategic Forces Command, which oversees the country’s nuclear weapons stockpile.

Once that induction process is complete, India will join an elite group of countries with access to intercontinental ballistic missiles, a list that includes China, Russia and the United States, experts say.

China has criticized India’s development of the Agni 5 in the past. After an early test of the missile, Du Wenlong, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Military Science, told the Global Times that the Agni 5 had a strike range of about 5,000 miles, rather than 3,000 miles. He said the Indian government had deliberately played down its range “to avoid causing concern to other countries.”

Indian politicians and defense analysts said they were elated by the missile test, with the country’s president, Ram Nath Kovind, writing on Twitter that the test-firing “makes every Indian proud” and “will boost our strategic defense.”

The Indian National Congress party said the launch was “the culmination of a multi-decade effort” started by former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to shore up the country’s arsenal of missiles.

Saurav Jha, the editor in chief of the Delhi Defense Review, wrote in an editorial that the development of the Agni 5 “marks the arrival of India as a missile power.”


https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/18/world/asia/india-ballistic-missile-icbm.html

@Chinese-Dragon @wanglaokan Why China dont act the way US does on NK?
 
. . .
ASIA PACIFIC
India Tests Ballistic Missile, Posing New Threat to China
查看简体中文版
查看繁體中文版


By KAI SCHULTZ and HARI KUMARJAN. 18, 2018

  • a long-range ballistic missile capable of carrying nuclear weapons on Thursday, paving the way for membership to a small list of countries with access to intercontinental missiles and putting most of China in its reach.

    The ballistic missile, called Agni 5, was launched from Abdul Kalam Island, off Odisha State in eastern India on Thursday morning, traveling for around 19 minutes and 3,000 miles. In a statement, the Indian Ministry of Defense said that all objectives of the mission had been “successfully met.”

    The firing of the Agni-5 comes months after the official end of a standoffbetween China and India over a remote sliver of land in the Himalayas, a squabble that lasted for more than two months and that was one of the worst border disputes between the countries in 30 years. The launch also comes during a tense period in India’s troubled relationship with Pakistan, its nuclear-armed neighbor.

    Nitin A. Gokhale, an independent national security analyst in New Delhi, said India did not previously have a missile capable of hitting “high-value targets” in China. But Thursday’s successful launch of the Agni 5 has changed the calculus, he said, putting most of China, including major eastern coastal cities such as Shanghai, in reach.

    “If there are hostilities, and if there are contingencies, then India has something which can deter China or at least make China think twice,” he said

The Agni 5 — Agni means fire in Hindi — is about 55 feet long and was developed in India. It is the most advanced missile in the Agni series, with a strike range of more than 3,000 miles and a payload of 1.5 tons, which is enough to transport a fusion-boosted fission weapon, a type of nuclear device.

Coming after four previous tests, Thursday’s firing of the Agni 5 took India closer to incorporating the missile into its Strategic Forces Command, which oversees the country’s nuclear weapons stockpile.

Once that induction process is complete, India will join an elite group of countries with access to intercontinental ballistic missiles, a list that includes China, Russia and the United States, experts say.

China has criticized India’s development of the Agni 5 in the past. After an early test of the missile, Du Wenlong, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Military Science, told the Global Times that the Agni 5 had a strike range of about 5,000 miles, rather than 3,000 miles. He said the Indian government had deliberately played down its range “to avoid causing concern to other countries.”

Indian politicians and defense analysts said they were elated by the missile test, with the country’s president, Ram Nath Kovind, writing on Twitter that the test-firing “makes every Indian proud” and “will boost our strategic defense.”

The Indian National Congress party said the launch was “the culmination of a multi-decade effort” started by former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to shore up the country’s arsenal of missiles.

Saurav Jha, the editor in chief of the Delhi Defense Review, wrote in an editorial that the development of the Agni 5 “marks the arrival of India as a missile power.”


https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/18/world/asia/india-ballistic-missile-icbm.html

@Chinese-Dragon @wanglaokan Why China dont act the way US does on NK?
We will keep close eyes on it
 
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