India's latest stealth guided missile Destroyer, INS Kochi, today
validated its capability to fire the Indo-Russian BrahMos supersonic
cruise missile, when it tested the weapon system at sea off the western
coast. The warship was commissioned by Defense Minister Manohar Parrikar
on Sep.30, 2015. Today's trial was the 49th test firing of BrahMos
missile.
"The formidable BrahMos
supersonic cruise missile on Sunday, Nov.1, 2015 validated its strike
power yet again after being successfully tested from Indian Navy's
newest stealth destroyer INS Kochi on the West coast of India," an
official announcement said.
The second of Project 15A
Kolkata-class guided missile destroyer test fired the advanced BrahMos
missile system as part of an Acceptance Test Firing during a naval drill
being conducted off India's West coast.
The world's fastest cruise
missile, after performing high-level and extremely complex maneuvres,
successfully hit a decommissioned target ship 'Alleppey' located at
nearly full range of the missile (290-km), with high precision.
After two successful test trials
from INS Kolkata in June 2014 and February 2015, today's test firing
from the follow-on INS Kochi has validated the newly-commissioned ship's
systems.
"BrahMos as the prime strike
weapon will ensure the warship's invincibility by engaging naval surface
targets at long ranges, thus making the destroyer another lethal
platform of Indian Navy," BrahMos Aerospace CEO and Managing Director
Sudhir Mishra confirmed the successful test by phone.
The 7,500-ton indigenously developed
INS Kochi incorporates new design concepts for improved survivability,
stealth, sea-keeping and manoeuvrability.
The warship has the advanced
capability of carrying a total of 16 BrahMos missiles in two 8-cell
vertical launch systems, besides other sophisticated weapons and
sensors.
BrahMos missile having supersonic
speed of Mach 2.8, a very low-cruising altitude of 10 meters at
terminal phase and pin-point accuracy, would make the warship one of the
deadliest in the Indian Navy fleet.
The two-stage BrahMos missile, a joint development by India and Russia, has been in service with the Indian Navy since 2005.
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