NEW DELHI India test-fired a medium-range, nuclear-capable missile Wednesday from a land-based launcher in eastern India, a defense ministry official said.
The weapon tested was a K-15 missile, an undersea submarine-launched ballistic missile with a range of up to 435 miles, said the officer on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to reporters.
It was fired from a test range in Chandipur in eastern Orissa state, nearly 700 miles southeast of New Delhi.
Nov. 12: A missile lifts off from a test range in Balasore in eastern Indian state of Orissa, India.
India and longtime rival Pakistan routinely test-fire missiles. They usually notify each other ahead of missile launches in keeping with an agreement between the two nations.
India test-fired the K-15 missile from a pontoon immersed in the sea earlier this year.
India's current crop of missiles are mostly intended for confronting neighboring archrival Pakistan.
The Agni 3, in contrast, is India's longest-range missile, designed to reach 1,900 miles -- putting China's major cities well into range, as well as targets deep in the Middle East.
India and Pakistan have fought three wars since their independence from Britain in 1947. They have been holding peace talks since 1994 aimed at resolving their differences, including their dispute over the Himalayan region of Kashmir.