What's new

India's Ballistic Missile Defense Options

Spring Onion

PDF VETERAN
Joined
Feb 1, 2006
Messages
41,403
Reaction score
19
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
December 17, 2010
India's Ballistic Missile Defense Options
By Nathan Cohn

Despite steady efforts toward developing ballistic missile defenses (BMD), the purpose of India’s emerging capabilities remains obscure. Given the glacial pace of Indian strategic decision-making, New Delhi may not have decided what purpose BMD is to serve and where to deploy it. Even so, Pakistan’s military-planners have likely begun to consider potential responses. These decisions and their ramifications will be influenced by assumptions about the scope and mission of future Indian missile defenses.

India began BMD flight tests in 2006. Some Indian officials have claimed that initial tests have been exceptionally successful. In reality, claims of BMD effectiveness are questionable at this early stage of development. The history of U.S. BMD programs suggests that India will need to overcome significant technical challenges before claims of effectiveness are plausible. Moreover, India’s defense research establishment has experienced difficulties in developing other major weapons systems and the challenges of BMD development are daunting.

Assuming the government of India succeeds in developing BMD or purchases such capabilities elsewhere, New Delhi could deploy the system to accomplish several potential missions. Opportunity and financial costs associated with BMD deployments, as well as an assessment of which assets are most essential to protect, would certainly factor into India’s decisions. Thus far, India has not elaborated publicly on the purposes and architecture of its missile defenses. How might India choose to deploy BMD, and how might Pakistan respond?

One plausible deployment is a defense of India’s leadership and the Nuclear Command Authority (NCA) around New Delhi. The mission would be to protect the Indian leadership from the threat of a decapitating nuclear attack – or to dissuade Pakistan’s military leadership from believing such an attack could succeed. There are other ways for the government of India to protect its leadership, such as by dispersal to bunkers away from the capital. But New Delhi could decide to adopt multiple approaches to protecting the continuity of its government, including BMD. If the protection of India’s NCA by means of BMD is a fixed requirement, then Pakistan’s prospective counters are immaterial to New Delhi.

A second option is a thin and perhaps symbolic defense of India’s two most iconic cities, New Delhi, the seat of the government, and Mumbai, the commercial capital and the location of significant nuclear infrastructure. Symbolic defenses could fulfill domestic political imperatives and accede to the urgings of India’s strategic enclave, without committing vast resources necessary to achieve harder objectives. Limited defenses of New Delhi and Mumbai would still place India in a select category of states, including the United States, Russia, Israel, and Japan, that have some kind of BMD deployments.

A third option is for BMD to accompany Indian troops in carrying out “Cold Start,” a limited war doctrine designed to retaliate against mass casualty attacks on Indian soil linked to Pakistan’s military and intelligence services. In this scenario, Indian leaders might presume that BMD deployments could be of assistance in calling Pakistan’s nuclear threats as a bluff. If escalation occurs across the nuclear threshold, New Delhi would have to rely on their missile defenses working effectively the very first time they were required on the battlefield. Depending on the size of the theater of war and the number and kind of missiles challenging Indian missile defenses, this might be a heroic assumption.

Other Indian BMD deployment options are harder to envision and even less feasible. A nation-wide defense of Indian population centers from breakdowns in Pakistani command and control or from terrorists in possession of ballistic missiles would be financially prohibitive: there are simply too many large cities to protect. Protecting India’s nuclear-capable assets and infrastructure, which are widely dispersed, is also too hard and too expensive. Relying on mobility to ensure the survivability of India’s arsenal is a better bet than relying on missile defenses.

The development of missile defenses has predictably stoked Islamabad’s concern that India is attempting to neutralize Pakistan’s nuclear deterrent, which Pakistan considers essential to deter a conventional war with India. New Delhi’s interest in BMD has heightened Pakistan’s security concerns, providing Pakistan yet another rationale for increasing its nuclear weapon requirements. However, Pakistan may already be the world’s fastest growing nuclear power. There are many drivers of Pakistan’s on-going nuclear expansion, such as conventional military asymmetries, Cold Start, and the U.S.-India nuclear deal. These factors make it difficult to argue that Pakistan’s nuclear expansion would proceed at a more modest pace in the absence of BMD.

Nonetheless, Indian ballistic missile defenses are likely to marginally increase Pakistani military concerns that it will be unable to hold defended targets at risk, generating further improvements in Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, especially with regard to penetration aids. Other potential counters to prospective Indian missile defenses, including cruise missiles, are already being pursued.

If decapitation is a fixed targeting strategy for Pakistan, BMD deployments around New Delhi may be especially likely to increase Pakistan’s qualitative or quantitative nuclear requirements. Similarly, any Indian effort which appears designed to back up Cold Start and to negate Pakistani threats to use nuclear weapons would be of great concern to Pakistan’s military establishment, even though they are likely to express confidence in being able to defeat missile defenses.

The world’s most dangerous strategic competition is occurring in Southern Asia, where China, India, and Pakistan are expanding their nuclear arsenals and ballistic missiles, competing for influence in the Indian Ocean and Afghanistan, and modernizing their conventional forces. Escalation control is not easy on the subcontinent, and Indian deployment of Indian BMD will make it more challenging. But the threat of escalation begins with a mass casualty attack on Indian soil. India’s Cold Start strategy increases the risk of full-scale conventional war and uncontrolled escalation in the aftermath of such an attack. If Pakistani authorities wish to avoid triggering Cold Start as well as concerns over prospective Indian missile defenses, they would be well advised to work harder at preventing acts of terrorism on Indian soil

IntelliBriefs: India's Ballistic Missile Defense Options
 
. .
I heard before the Indian army had requested a presentation on PAC-3 from the US but I feel we should go for the Arrow 3 once Israel has completed the project
 
.
dont talk to a journo like that man......she knows more than you....she is one of the most respected persons here who finds time for writing facts and well reaserched articles in news papers.--she does all this- when not posting in def pk(she has the highest no. of posts here by the way-17,800 0dd posts which is much more than any founder member/moderator of this forum......
 
.
December 17, 2010
India's Ballistic Missile Defense Options
By Nathan Cohn

Despite steady efforts toward developing ballistic missile defenses (BMD), the purpose of India’s emerging capabilities remains obscure. Given the glacial pace of Indian strategic decision-making, New Delhi may not have decided what purpose BMD is to serve and where to deploy it. Even so, Pakistan’s military-planners have likely begun to consider potential responses. These decisions and their ramifications will be influenced by assumptions about the scope and mission of future Indian missile defenses.

India began BMD flight tests in 2006. Some Indian officials have claimed that initial tests have been exceptionally successful. In reality, claims of BMD effectiveness are questionable at this early stage of development. The history of U.S. BMD programs suggests that India will need to overcome significant technical challenges before claims of effectiveness are plausible. Moreover, India’s defense research establishment has experienced difficulties in developing other major weapons systems and the challenges of BMD development are daunting.

Assuming the government of India succeeds in developing BMD or purchases such capabilities elsewhere, New Delhi could deploy the system to accomplish several potential missions. Opportunity and financial costs associated with BMD deployments, as well as an assessment of which assets are most essential to protect, would certainly factor into India’s decisions. Thus far, India has not elaborated publicly on the purposes and architecture of its missile defenses. How might India choose to deploy BMD, and how might Pakistan respond?

One plausible deployment is a defense of India’s leadership and the Nuclear Command Authority (NCA) around New Delhi. The mission would be to protect the Indian leadership from the threat of a decapitating nuclear attack – or to dissuade Pakistan’s military leadership from believing such an attack could succeed. There are other ways for the government of India to protect its leadership, such as by dispersal to bunkers away from the capital. But New Delhi could decide to adopt multiple approaches to protecting the continuity of its government, including BMD. If the protection of India’s NCA by means of BMD is a fixed requirement, then Pakistan’s prospective counters are immaterial to New Delhi.

A second option is a thin and perhaps symbolic defense of India’s two most iconic cities, New Delhi, the seat of the government, and Mumbai, the commercial capital and the location of significant nuclear infrastructure. Symbolic defenses could fulfill domestic political imperatives and accede to the urgings of India’s strategic enclave, without committing vast resources necessary to achieve harder objectives. Limited defenses of New Delhi and Mumbai would still place India in a select category of states, including the United States, Russia, Israel, and Japan, that have some kind of BMD deployments.

A third option is for BMD to accompany Indian troops in carrying out “Cold Start,” a limited war doctrine designed to retaliate against mass casualty attacks on Indian soil linked to Pakistan’s military and intelligence services. In this scenario, Indian leaders might presume that BMD deployments could be of assistance in calling Pakistan’s nuclear threats as a bluff. If escalation occurs across the nuclear threshold, New Delhi would have to rely on their missile defenses working effectively the very first time they were required on the battlefield. Depending on the size of the theater of war and the number and kind of missiles challenging Indian missile defenses, this might be a heroic assumption.

Other Indian BMD deployment options are harder to envision and even less feasible. A nation-wide defense of Indian population centers from breakdowns in Pakistani command and control or from terrorists in possession of ballistic missiles would be financially prohibitive: there are simply too many large cities to protect. Protecting India’s nuclear-capable assets and infrastructure, which are widely dispersed, is also too hard and too expensive. Relying on mobility to ensure the survivability of India’s arsenal is a better bet than relying on missile defenses.

The development of missile defenses has predictably stoked Islamabad’s concern that India is attempting to neutralize Pakistan’s nuclear deterrent, which Pakistan considers essential to deter a conventional war with India. New Delhi’s interest in BMD has heightened Pakistan’s security concerns, providing Pakistan yet another rationale for increasing its nuclear weapon requirements. However, Pakistan may already be the world’s fastest growing nuclear power. There are many drivers of Pakistan’s on-going nuclear expansion, such as conventional military asymmetries, Cold Start, and the U.S.-India nuclear deal. These factors make it difficult to argue that Pakistan’s nuclear expansion would proceed at a more modest pace in the absence of BMD.

Nonetheless, Indian ballistic missile defenses are likely to marginally increase Pakistani military concerns that it will be unable to hold defended targets at risk, generating further improvements in Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, especially with regard to penetration aids. Other potential counters to prospective Indian missile defenses, including cruise missiles, are already being pursued.

If decapitation is a fixed targeting strategy for Pakistan, BMD deployments around New Delhi may be especially likely to increase Pakistan’s qualitative or quantitative nuclear requirements. Similarly, any Indian effort which appears designed to back up Cold Start and to negate Pakistani threats to use nuclear weapons would be of great concern to Pakistan’s military establishment, even though they are likely to express confidence in being able to defeat missile defenses.

The world’s most dangerous strategic competition is occurring in Southern Asia, where China, India, and Pakistan are expanding their nuclear arsenals and ballistic missiles, competing for influence in the Indian Ocean and Afghanistan, and modernizing their conventional forces. Escalation control is not easy on the subcontinent, and Indian deployment of Indian BMD will make it more challenging. But the threat of escalation begins with a mass casualty attack on Indian soil. India’s Cold Start strategy increases the risk of full-scale conventional war and uncontrolled escalation in the aftermath of such an attack. If Pakistani authorities wish to avoid triggering Cold Start as well as concerns over prospective Indian missile defenses, they would be well advised to work harder at preventing acts of terrorism on Indian soil

IntelliBriefs: India's Ballistic Missile Defense Options

add one more option

To take down enemy's satellite ..
 
.
I heard before the Indian army had requested a presentation on PAC-3 from the US but I feel we should go for the Arrow 3 once Israel has completed the project
when we get our own in 2-3yr then why we brought from other country. But if we need they I success we should go for S-400 which is better then these 2.
 
.
when we get our own in 2-3yr then why we brought from other country. But if we need they I success we should go for S-400 which is better then these 2.


Better than Arrow 3? im not to sure about that

Israel Aerospace Industries, which is developing the Arrow-3, is currently performing ground testing of the new missile, which will intercept incoming ballistic missiles using kinetic kill instead of proximity warhead detonation as with the operational Arrow-2.

Israeli sources say the Arrow-3 will be the most advanced ballistic missile interceptor in the world. They say it will be "very energetic" and have "super manoeuvrability", enabling it to change its trajectory to engage another target that was detected after launch.

Military Aircraft and Military Aviation News from Flightglobal
 
.
Better than Arrow 3? im not to sure about that

Israel Aerospace Industries, which is developing the Arrow-3, is currently performing ground testing of the new missile, which will intercept incoming ballistic missiles using kinetic kill instead of proximity warhead detonation as with the operational Arrow-2.

Israeli sources say the Arrow-3 will be the most advanced ballistic missile interceptor in the world. They say it will be "very energetic" and have "super manoeuvrability", enabling it to change its trajectory to engage another target that was detected after launch.

Military Aircraft and Military Aviation News from Flightglobal

But Arrow project is mainly funded by America
So they will not allow us like they did last time
 
.

But Arrow project is mainly funded by America
So they will not allow us like they did last time

That is true but if i remember last time we made that request was quite a few years back and now the US-INDO relationship has evolved to new levels with the lifting of the dual-use tech sanctions. Who knows if we ask we might get no harm in making a formal request they might say yes this time.
 
.
That is true but if i remember last time we made that request was quite a few years back and now the US-INDO relationship has evolved to new levels with the lifting of the dual-use tech sanctions. Who knows if we ask we might get no harm in making a formal request they might say yes this time.

But why they want their loss cause they also want to sell their system to India
 
.
Wrong! This blog only revolve around BMD ,BUT forget to mention india response to 1st pakistan failed attempt to nuke new delhi or mumbai! Here the response - "India's nuclear policy currently states that even though there will be no first-use of nuclear weapons by India, "nuclear retaliation to a first strike will be massive and designed to inflict unacceptable damage".
 
.
Wrong! This blog only revolve around BMD ,BUT forget to mention india response to 1st pakistan failed attempt to nuke new delhi or mumbai! Here the response - "India's nuclear policy currently states that even though there will be no first-use of nuclear weapons by India, "nuclear retaliation to a first strike will be massive and designed to inflict unacceptable damage".

India's nuclear policy has changed according to latest news the policy is "No first use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear weapon state" that means India can strike first against a nuclear state if her sovereignty is under stake....I don't have a link but this mentioned in Wiki... you can check
 
.
India's nuclear policy has changed according to latest news the policy is "No first use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear weapon state" that means India can strike first against a nuclear state if her sovereignty is under stake....I don't have a link but this mentioned in Wiki... you can check

:undecided:

How can a non-nuclear state use nuclear bomb ???
 
.
India's nuclear policy has changed according to latest news the policy is "No first use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear weapon state" that means India can strike first against a nuclear state if her sovereignty is under stake....I don't have a link but this mentioned in Wiki... you can check

:undecided:

How can a non-nuclear state use nuclear bomb ???

The NFU purpoted by India ,IMHO, is just pure hogwash and acts like a smokescreen.

Do any one honestly believe,that in the unlikely scenario of loosing huge territory to China (loosing to Pakistan is impossible) India will be sitting back saving the precious nukes ??

I dont think so. The NFU is purely for international consumption trying to create the image of a responsible nuke power an going by the looks of it seems to be working quite well. :azn:
 
.
The whole article is bull load and written in keeping pakistan's concerns and fears.

1.) India don't have to deploy BMD for every inch of its territory. We just need it for about a dozen cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangaluru, Hyderabad etc.

2.) As for bunkers we already have nuclear bunkers with food, electricity etc. for PM, President, Military heads.

3.) We also have safe houses underground Nuke bunkers in thousands of kms away from border or Delhi. For our top leadership, military, scientists etc.

4.) We have other classified arrangements too.

5.) What we need is to throw our No First Strike policy to take the air out of pakistan/china. :devil:

6.) As we are building Nuke submarines with long range nuke missile and hiding Nuke missile in mountains we need to do it in very large scale. :devil:

7.) And in last as the writer in the article is having stomach ache for huge cost, no need to worry we are growing and earning very fast. So keep burning and we will keep on bringing fear to you. :pop::wave:
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom