India Missiles and Guided Munitions

Gessler

Contributor
Moderator
India Moderator
Messages
1,098
Reactions
69 2,569
Nation of residence
India
Nation of origin
India
Something big was tested off the east coast today...

View attachment 80446

View attachment 80447

The issued NOTAM was for a distance of just over 3500 kms, so most probably an Agni-derived boost stage. No statement yet on what the upper stage was.

Here we go - it was a MIRVed Agni!


"Advanced Agni missile with MIRV (Multiple Independently Targeted Re-Entry Vehicle) system was successfully tested from Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam Island, Odisha on 08th May 2026. The missile was flight tested with Multiple payloads, targeted to different targets spatially distributed over a large geographical area in Indian Ocean Region."

HH33i82bYAAxCPR.jpg


Edited & color-corrected version of the pic found on another forum:

IMG_20260509_170752.png


This is the first (known) night-launch of the MIRVed Agni. Note that they do not specifically refer to it as Agni-V anymore. I speculated previously that the MIRVed platform represents the notional 'Agni-V Mk.2'.

Seems the "Advanced Agni" is pretty much that. Also worth noting is that it seems this test was conducted on a lofted trajectory (hence the ~3500 km NOTAM instead of the platform's original +5000 km reach), though I have to wonder if that's not a result of the increase in payload.
 

Afif

Experienced member
Moderator
Bangladesh Correspondent
DefenceHub Diplomat
Bangladesh Moderator
Messages
5,088
Reactions
104 9,923
Nation of residence
Bangladesh
Nation of origin
Bangladesh
Here we go - it was a MIRVed Agni!


"Advanced Agni missile with MIRV (Multiple Independently Targeted Re-Entry Vehicle) system was successfully tested from Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam Island, Odisha on 08th May 2026. The missile was flight tested with Multiple payloads, targeted to different targets spatially distributed over a large geographical area in Indian Ocean Region."

View attachment 80453

Edited & color-corrected version of the pic found on another forum:

View attachment 80454

This is the first (known) night-launch of the MIRVed Agni. Note that they do not specifically refer to it as Agni-V anymore. I speculated previously that the MIRVed platform represents the notional 'Agni-V Mk.2'.

Seems the "Advanced Agni" is pretty much that. Also worth noting is that it seems this test was conducted on a lofted trajectory (hence the ~3500 km NOTAM instead of the platform's original +5000 km reach), though I have to wonder if that's not a result of the increase in payload.

I wonder how much Chinese HQ19 Exo-atmospheric and HQ29 mid-course interceptors affect India's current deterrence posture.
 

Gessler

Contributor
Moderator
India Moderator
Messages
1,098
Reactions
69 2,569
Nation of residence
India
Nation of origin
India
I wonder how much Chinese HQ19 Exo-atmospheric and HQ29 mid-course interceptors affect India's current deterrence posture.

As of now, I'm afraid there isn't really much of a credible deterrence posture against China to begin with. Let alone taking the ABMs into account.

The reason for that is that I feel true credibility only comes with a survivable second-strike capability. While it appears the K-4 SLBM might finally be operational on at least 2 SSBNs, the problem with its ~3500 km range is that the submarines have to confine themselves to a relatively small portion of the northern Bay of Bengal in order to hold Beijing within reach. This can present a lot of problems if one has to deal with the possibility of Chinese SSN presence in the Bay.

A way around this could be to load up a sub and send it off on a months-long deterrence patrol somewhere in the Philippine Sea or the Pacific. But I doubt IN would be willing to do that especially when we don't have any SSNs to accompany/support/delouse it. SSKs are no good for this job.

And then there's the issue that the current SSBNs can only carry 4-8 missiles, each with a lone unitary warhead. Overall, the situation is far from ideal.

The only way to fix this is through the S-5 class SSBNs and their K-5/K-6 MIRVed SLBMs with intercontinental ranges. It's only then that an ability to hold Beijing under threat from pretty much any part of the Bay of Bengal (or even the Arabian Sea) will be attained. Each one of those boats will be able to carry at least 48 warheads (assuming 4-MIRV config) as opposed to just 4-8 warheads on each Arihant-class. The sea-capable nuclear arsenal will see a seven-fold increase once all four S-5s are commissioned.

Plus, arrival of SSNs under Project-77 will enable much more expansive deployment patterns. But that will all start happening only in the next decade.

===

As of the ABMs, it's anyone's guess how good the Chinese ones are. I doubt they'll do much to change what needs to be done to punch through (more warheads, better penetration aids, maybe more novel RVs like some of the HGVs we're testing). The Chinese aren't deploying anything the US hasn't already done, and if the deterrence equation didn't change drastically there, I don't think it'd change much here either.
 

Gessler

Contributor
Moderator
India Moderator
Messages
1,098
Reactions
69 2,569
Nation of residence
India
Nation of origin
India
Here we go - it was a MIRVed Agni!


"Advanced Agni missile with MIRV (Multiple Independently Targeted Re-Entry Vehicle) system was successfully tested from Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam Island, Odisha on 08th May 2026. The missile was flight tested with Multiple payloads, targeted to different targets spatially distributed over a large geographical area in Indian Ocean Region."

View attachment 80453

Edited & color-corrected version of the pic found on another forum:

View attachment 80454

This is the first (known) night-launch of the MIRVed Agni. Note that they do not specifically refer to it as Agni-V anymore. I speculated previously that the MIRVed platform represents the notional 'Agni-V Mk.2'.

Seems the "Advanced Agni" is pretty much that. Also worth noting is that it seems this test was conducted on a lofted trajectory (hence the ~3500 km NOTAM instead of the platform's original +5000 km reach), though I have to wonder if that's not a result of the increase in payload.


The Agni-V Mk2 (Divyastra) is an advanced, MIRV capable iteration of the Agni-V. Major improvements include replacement of maraging steel first stage casing with one manufactured using carbon composite filament winding, It is India's largest composite casing for now.

That, combined with the use of electro-mechanical actuators, rather than electro-hydraulic ones, for the flex nozzle control for all stages, have lead to weight savings as compared to the baseline Agni-V, which weighed around 50 tons.

====

The PBV may be separate from the 3rd stage, as per some knowledgeable watchers.

HH4C3UFaUAAl5DJ.jpg
 

Nilgiri

Experienced member
Staff member
Administrator
Aviation Specialist
Messages
10,883
Reactions
152 22,180
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India

Nilgiri

Experienced member
Staff member
Administrator
Aviation Specialist
Messages
10,883
Reactions
152 22,180
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
Goes into bedrock details of IGMDP, Abdul Kalam and the initial program leads and how that has all grown to today and the next development steps....

India has tested hypersonic glide weapons, scramjet engines and MIRV-capable missiles: technologies considered the future of warfare. But how significant are these breakthroughs really? Can hypersonic missiles truly evade modern air defences? And why does Dr Sudhir Mishra call scramjets the “holy grail” of missile technology?

In this episode of The Sandeep Unnithan Show, former MD & CEO, BrahMos, Dr Sudhir Mishra breaks down India’s next generation weapons, future warfare, UAVs, missile defence and the lessons of Dr APJ Abdul Kalam.

 

Afif

Experienced member
Moderator
Bangladesh Correspondent
DefenceHub Diplomat
Bangladesh Moderator
Messages
5,088
Reactions
104 9,923
Nation of residence
Bangladesh
Nation of origin
Bangladesh
Goes into bedrock details of IGMDP, Abdul Kalam and the initial program leads and how that has all grown to today and the next development steps....

India has tested hypersonic glide weapons, scramjet engines and MIRV-capable missiles: technologies considered the future of warfare. But how significant are these breakthroughs really? Can hypersonic missiles truly evade modern air defences? And why does Dr Sudhir Mishra call scramjets the “holy grail” of missile technology?

In this episode of The Sandeep Unnithan Show, former MD & CEO, BrahMos, Dr Sudhir Mishra breaks down India’s next generation weapons, future warfare, UAVs, missile defence and the lessons of Dr APJ Abdul Kalam.


At 15:55 he said US and China hasn't reached level of technology in scramjet that India has reached.

Are all the researches and tests regarding HCM development publicly disclosed and published in USA and (specially) China to reach this conclusion? I doubt it.
 

Nilgiri

Experienced member
Staff member
Administrator
Aviation Specialist
Messages
10,883
Reactions
152 22,180
Nation of residence
Canada
Nation of origin
India
At 15:55 he said US and China hasn't reached level of technology in scramjet that India has reached.

Are all the researches and tests regarding HCM development publicly disclosed and published in USA and (specially) China to reach this conclusion? I doubt it.

He was referring to the duration of the test being 20 minutes long.

The others tests are in the several minutes range.

So he taking pride in that, whats the big deal?
 
Top Bottom