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Russia, India negotiate joint development of hypersonic cruise missi

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  • Russia, India negotiate joint development of hypersonic cruise missi

    RUSSIA, INDIA NEGOTIATE JOINT DEVELOPMENT OF HYPERSONIC CRUISE MISSILE

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    March 30, 2012 - 13:43 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - Russia and India are in talks to jointly develop
    a hypersonic cruise missile and will soon agree on a general outline
    of the design, the head of the BrahMos Indian-Russian cruise missile
    program, Praveen Pathak, said on Friday, March 30, at the Defexpo
    defense show in Delhi.

    "In the near future, we will set up a joint working group which will
    work out the parameters of the missile in cooperation with developers,
    and also decide how much each side will contribue to the project,"
    Pathak said.

    The weapon will be capable of flying at Mach 5-Mach 7 speeds, he said.

    "We want to create a weapon which would not differ much from the
    existing BrahMos missile in weight and dimensions, so that it could be
    used in existing launchers on ships or mobile launchers. In this case
    it would not take too much work to convert such systems to hypersonic,"
    he said.

    India will also carry out the first test-firing of the air-launched
    variant of the BrahMos Russian-Indian supersonic cruise missile by
    the end of this year, BrahMos head Praveen Pathak said on Friday at
    the Defexpo defense exhibition in Delhi.

    "We hope by the end of the year we'll carry out the first launch from
    an aircraft. It will be an air-launch," he said.

    Work on adapting the air-launched variant of BrahMos to arm India's
    Su-30MKI aircraft is being undertaken for the Indian air force, he
    said. Several aircraft have already been modified to carry the weapon,
    he added.

    The Indian air force has already taken delivery of enough of the
    ground-launched variant to equip two battalions. The missiles will be
    based near India's borders to strike at enemy airfields, air defense
    sites and radar stations, said Pathak.

    India tested a ground-launched BrahMos earlier this month. "The missile
    flew its maximum range, 290 km. The terminal phase of the flight was
    a steep diving trajectory. This is one of the requirements for the
    ground forces," he said, adding that a steep diving attack profile
    was necessary for hitting targets in mountainous terrain.

    BrahMos, a derivative of the Russian NPO Mashinostroeniye 3M55 Yakhont
    naval cruise missile, is one of the most capable weapons of its class,
    combining long-range (up to 290 km), high speed (up to Mach 2.8)
    a heavy warhead of up to 250 kg, a low radar profile and a variable
    attack profile, including low level flight down to 10 meters and up
    to 14,000 meters. The weapon operates on a fire-and-forget principle.

    The ground-launched variant weighs around three tons at launch,
    RIA Novosti reported.

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