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India's Nuclear Triad to Ready By End Of 2011

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NEW DELHI: Only a few countries, US, Russia and China, can be said to have fully-operational nuclear weapon triads -- the capability to fire nuclear-tipped missiles from land, air and sea. India will gatecrash into this highly-exclusive club by 2012.

Navy chief Admiral Nirmal Verma, not given to making dramatic statements, said the triad will be complete once its crucial underwater leg, the country's first indigenous nuclear submarine aptly named INS Arihant or the "destroyer of enemies", is commissioned towards late-2011 or early-2012.

The land and air legs are already in place with the Agni family of road and rail-mobile ballistic missiles as well as fighter jets like Mirage-2000s and Sukhoi-30MKIs jury-rigged to deliver nuclear weapons.

"When INS Arihant goes to sea, it will be on a deterrent patrol (read armed with nucelar-tipped missiles). The triad will then be in place... the aim is to make it as effective as possible," Admiral Verma said on Thursday, in the run-up to Navy Day on December 4.

This comes barely a day after Wikileaks revealed that American and European diplomats were greatly alarmed about Pakistan's feverish production of nuclear weapons. Estimates show Pakistan already has around 70 to 90 warheads, higher than India's 60 to 80. China, of course, is way ahead with around 240 warheads.

While Pakistan is nowhere near getting a nuclear submarine, China has 10 of them in its 62-submarine fleet, with three of them being SSBNs (armed with long-range strategic missiles). India, in contrast, has just 15 conventional and ageing diesel-electric submarines.

Consequently, INS Arihant is crucial to India's nuclear deterrence doctrine, which revolves around a clear "no-first use" policy. A robust and survivable second-strike capability is hugely dependent on having nuclear-powered submarines, armed with SLBMs (submarine-launched ballistic missiles), which can operate silently underwater for several months at a time.

Admiral Verma said INS Arihant, which was "launched" at Vizag in July 2009, would have potent SLBM capabilities to complete the triad. With INS Arihant's miniature 83 mw pressurised light-water reactor slated to go "critical" within a month or two for sea-acceptance trials, Navy also seems quite confident about ongoing undersea tests of the 700-km K-15 and 3,500-km K-4 SLBMs.

The 6,000-tonne INS Arihant, which has four silos on its hump to carry 12 K-15s or four extended range K-4s, is to be followed by another two nuclear submarines under the secretive Rs 30,000 crore Advanced Technology Vessel (ATV) project.

Navy, on its part, wants to have three SSBNs and six SSNs (nuclear-powered attack submarines) in the years ahead. The force will also finally induct the K-152 Nerpa submarine, on a 10-year lease from Russia, towards April-May 2011 after several delays.

While the 12,000-tonne Nerpa will not come armed with long-range missiles due to international treaties, it will help train Indian sailors in the complex art of operating nuclear submarines. It will also be a lethal hunter of enemy submarines and warships, armed with torpedoes and 300-km Klub-S cruise missiles.


Source
Read more: In a year, India will have nuclear triad: Navy chief - The Times of India In a year, India will have nuclear triad: Navy chief - The Times of India
 
Details of Arihant Nule Sub and the K15 missle on board

toi.JPG
 
The Arihant was said to be more of a technology demonstrator , while the next SSBN's of its class were to be larger in size and having better capability.We should work on an extended range to the K-4 's perhaps in the 10 k + range .....a true ICBM -range SLBM. Given our dockyards are already overloaded we need to prioritize by aloting Scorpenes , destroyers and other vessels to either foreign shipyards or so while using our indigeneous capability to complete the Nuke subs as soon as possible .

Both the Arihant and the leased Nerpa should be stationed at the Varsha base so it needs to be operationalized within the year.
 
it is imperative for india to develop its nuclear triad in line with no first use policy. induction of INS arihant will complete the triad. in my opinion we require around 5 nuclear power submarines with SLBM capability.
 
A 'Thank you' would have been more appropriate.

P.S. Not trying to teach you but we should not forget modesty in our reply.
My 2 cents :cheers:

i thanked him but his "?" made me to have some fun. may be he is referring to the so called club.

take those with pinch of salt :cheers:
 
so what about integration of brahmos with sukhoi ? any news on that?
thats also very important.

the trials were conducted in pokharan range. the trials were suceesfull. however AF offiicials say lil modification is required on both aircraft and missiles to make them fully compatible with each other. i am sure more trials will be carried out after modification.
 
Does anybody has any information about the next Arihant Class Nuke Sub. ?/ They were supposed to be launched in 2010 and 2011 respectively.
 
Does anybody has any information about the next Arihant Class Nuke Sub. ?/ They were supposed to be launched in 2010 and 2011 respectively.

As we don't have large facilities to test and built as that particular shipyard is busy with the testing of very first Arihant (It was mere filling of dock when media goes mad about Arihant) so the next Arihants will be launched (Now this particular word used by different person as per their convenience) by 2012.

Because we want to be 100% sure about the reactor and weapons trial.

I think we will induct the 2nd Arihant (fully loaded with weapons etc.) by 2014.
 
@ Veeru
Do you have any confirmed news regarding the dates ??/ I am not sure about the role of a shipyard in testing.
 

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