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India’s Agni-V ICBM to Carry Multiple Nuclear Warheads

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India is reconfiguring its longest-range missile to enable it to carry multiple nuclear warheads, Chennai-based The Hindu reported on Wednesday, citing a senior Indian official.

V.K. Saraswat, Director-General of the Defence Research and Development Organisation, told the newspaper that a team is modifying the Agni-V to give it the ability to carry Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry Vehicles (MIRVs).

“Work on that is going on and it is at design stage,” Saraswat told The Hindu.

The Agni-V is a nuclear-capable three-stage, solid-fuel missile with an initial range of 5,000 kilometers that will likely be extended to over 5,5000 kms, making it an Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile (ICBM). India first tested the Agni-V last April, and the launch was a success.

The test was widely celebrated among official India and the Indian press where some referred to as the “China killer” owing to the fact that missile puts in range all of China’s major cities for the first time. Saraswat himselfcalled the missile a “game-changer.”

MIRVs enable ICBMs to carry multiple nuclear warheads on a single missile, and strike multiple targets or a single target with greater efficiency. After the last stage of the ICBM boosts off, a MIRVed ICBM will dispense the warheads to their separate or singular targets. Both the Soviet Union and the United States MIRVed their ICBM forces during the 1970s, which complicated arms control agreements moving forward.

It has long been suspected that India would at some point seek to modify the Agni-V and the Agni-III— an intermediate range ballistic missile which has the same build as the Agni-V— with MIRVs. This is primarily because China is believed to be in the process of testing MIRVed versions of its DF-31 ICBM and DF-41 road-mobile ICBM.

MIRVing ICBMs has the potential to destabilize a mutually assured destruction situation primarily because they could give nations greater confidence in being able to destroy an adversary’s hardened missile silo sites in a first strike by launching multiple, lower yield warheads at the sites. This fear, in turn, increases the strategic logic of offensive action as nations could come to believe that they have to be the first side to launch nuclear strikes or risk having a large portion of their nuclear forces wiped out by an adversary.

There were strong fears throughout the second half of the Cold War about the destabilizing effects of MIRVed missiles. As one source recounts:

“MIRVed land-based ICBMs were considered destabilizing because they tended to put a premium on striking first. MIRVs threatened to rapidly increase the U.S.’s deployable nuclear arsenal and thus the possibility that it would have enough bombs to destroy virtually all of the Soviet Union’s nuclear weapons and negate any significant retaliation. Later on the U.S. feared the Soviet’s MIRVs because Soviet missiles had a greater throw-weight and could thus put more warheads on each missile than the U.S. could.”

The smaller size of the Chinese and Indian nuclear and missile forces could enhance the destabilizing nature of introducing MIRV technology into the relationship. It should be noted, however, that both China and India have no-first use nuclear doctrines, which should theoretically reduce the danger and anxiety created by MIRVed nuclear forces. Additionally both India and China are in the process of acquiring Submarine Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBMs) that, once reliable forces are operating, virtually ensure that some second strike capability would survive a first strike by the other side.

Still, at the very least the introduction of MIRVed technology into the Sino-Indo strategic balance could convince both sides that they need to significantly expand the size of their nuclear forces. This would inevitably complicate global efforts to reduce the size of nuclear arsenals. Indeed, Russia recently stated that it is no longer interested in bilateral nuclear arms reductions with the United States, and will only pursue arms control agreements on a multilateral basis.
 
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AGNi-V with it's large apogee had already demonstrated its accuracy over even distances longer then the touted 5500KM range. Now subsequent versions will be made MIRV capable without any revision in its version number. Good going ! :tup:
 
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Mr. Sarawat.... Howmany times you need to tell us that A5 is going to have MIRV?????? We all know this.... Please spend more time with those hardworking team than giving interviews and press releases....
 
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Yes, its not an ICBM. But rogue states want to term India as a ICBM nation and pressurize UN on sanctions to India. STUPID strategy.

Actually it is ICBM. India has a habit of downgrading the reach of its Missile. It has enough fuel to go over 6000km.
 
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Mr. Sarawat.... Howmany times you need to tell us that A5 is going to have MIRV?????? We all know this.... Please spend more time with those hardworking team than giving interviews and press releases....

Mr. Nair why don't you write to all the Journalist's asking them not to interview Mr. Saraswat. If the Jurnalist are going to ask an question he is going to answer. :hitwall:
 
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Mr. Nair why don't you write to all the Journalist's asking them not to interview Mr. Saraswat. If the Jurnalist are going to ask an question he is going to answer. :hitwall:

Does journalists ask MMS any question????? Because they know they wont get any asnwer.... If this guy shut his mouth media will avoid him.... But if he enjoyed giving bites to media... they would use them to maximum....
 
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I guess it will carry 3 warheads

MIRVEd Agni 5 may have differently shaped third stage i.e like Topol M, as current pointed nose section is not suitable for carrying MIRVs(offers less space)

Its MRBM why illiterate journalists saying it ICBM?

Its IRBM, not MRBM
 
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Its MRBM why illiterate journalists saying it ICBM?

According to DRDO chief , Agni V has a range of 5500-5800 km.

An Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) is a ballistic missile with a range of more than 5,500 kilometres.

So Agni V is an ICBM.
 
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let's not get into the technicalities about the MRBM or ICBM. The truth is it can take out any of our current adversaries if need arises !
 
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Though i have read quite a number of literature about ICBM , looking at India's space program can we say that we are not still ready to produce real ICBM's (10,000KM +)????????
 
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Until final details are revealed to public domain...its anybody's guess..
My guess is same as what @IND151 said..
3 warheads for same general area..not independently targetable....just 3 warheads mounted on one missile to increase damage in the same general area.
 
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