SinoChallenger
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indians desperately buying anti-air and anti-missile systems. But don't have the money or technology to achieve effective coverage density or integration.
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The November 23 mission featured two attacker (target) missiles, one electronically simulated and launched from 1,500 km away and the other real and launched from 600 to 1,000 km away. The tests tried to reproduce a scenario where multiple enemy missiles could be raining on India, and the aim was to pulverise them in their tracks. Since Indian territory does not have the range and geometry to launch a target missile from a distance of 2,000 km
Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/indian-defence/223964-shield-sky-must-read.html#ixzz2EsCRZEot
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Eventually the missiles will have mirror coating...Eventually the ABM will be laser based...
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i like your signature, i want to join your rank.indians desperately buying anti-air and anti-missile systems. But don't have the money or technology to achieve effective coverage density or integration.
It sounds like India has or developing missile detection radars which can detect missiles from 2000 KM away...
Such a capability cannot be achieved by one mobile radar.Long range fixed radars will have to be constructed at carefully chosen sites.
In UK i often drive by this site
Thats RAF Longendale with AESA Radars of 2.5 Megawatt output..This one has Missile detection range of 5000+ Kilometers...