Published on 03:20 PM, May 21, 2018

India successfully test-fires BrahMos supersonic cruise missile

In this AFP file photo, a handout photograph released by the Indian Defence Ministry on November 1, 2015, a BrahMos supersonic cruise missile is test-fired from newly-commissioned indigeneous guided missile destroyer the INS Kochi.

India today successfully test-fired a supersonic cruise missile from a test range along the Bay of Bengal coast to validate some of its new features.

The BraHmos supersonic missile, a joint venture of India and Russia, was test-fired from a mobile launcher stationed at the Integrated Test Range (ITR) at Chandipur in the eastern state of Odisha, officials of state-owned Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) said.

The trial was conducted to validate its "life extension" technologies developed for the first time in India by DRDO and team BraHmos, our New Delhi correspondent reports quoting an official of the ITR.

Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman congratulated DRDO scientists for the successful launch of BraHmos missile with new technology. The missile has already been introduced in the Indian army and navy, while the air force version had witnessed successful trial, the DRDO scientists said.

The BrahMos missile can be launched from land, air, sea and under water. India successfully launched the world's fastest supersonic cruise missile from a fighter plane Sukhoi-30 MKI for the first time against a target in the Bay of Bengal in November last year.

At least two squadrons with 20 fighter jets each are planned to be equipped with the air-launch variant BrahMos missiles which are 500 kg lighter than land and naval variants.

India has already extended the range of the three-tonne missile from 290 km to 400 km and successfully test-fired the variant in March 2017.

Increasing the missile's range from 400 km to further 800 km is now possible following India's induction into the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) in June, 2016, officials said. Prior to that, India was bound by restrictions that limited the range of the missile to less than 300 km.