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India-Pakistan
India hopes to deploy ABM system within 4 years
2006-12-04
HYDERABAD, India: India's newly tested missile interception system will likely be turned into a weapon and deployed within four years, the head of the country's missiles development program said.

India is also working toward testing a newer and faster missile, Vijay Kumar Saraswat said at a news conference late Sunday.

His comments came a week after India's defense ministry said it had conducted its first successful test interception of a ballistic missile, using a rocket to shoot down an incoming missile. The missile was intercepted at an altitude of 50 kilometers (30 miles).

If the interceptor missile, the medium-range and nuclear-capable Prithvi II, can be transformed into a viable defense system, it would see India join an elite club of nations with working missile shields.

Saraswat said the Defense Research and Development Organization of India plans to add an improved homing device and faster maneuverability to the interceptor missile to shoot down an "enemy" missile at an altitude below 30 kilometers (20 miles).

The upgraded version, which will also be able to target aircraft, will be tested within four months.

"This is being done to increase the killing probability of our intercepting missile and to leave no leakage in the air defense system," Saraswat said.

Six to seven more tests are needed over the next four years before the interception system could be made into a weapon, he added.

The tests will involve firing five intercepting missiles two seconds apart to guarantee that an incoming missile is destroyed. Saraswat expected the success rate in intercepting a missile would be 99.8 percent.

India could produce 200 interceptor missiles a year, at a cost of 60 million rupees (US$1.3 million) each, Saraswat said.
Posted by:john

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