It can deliver four or six warheads 6,000 km away
Agni-VI with multiple nuclear warheads, which can reach
targets 6,000 km away, is all set to be developed by the Defence
Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).
Only in April last, it carried out the maiden launch of Agni-V, which has a range of more than 5,000 km.
So
far, all the strategic missiles developed by the DRDO — Agni-I, II,
III, IV and V, and the submarine-launched K-15 and its land-based
version Shourya — can carry only single nuclear warhead. The DRDO’s
tactical missiles and supersonic cruise missile BrahMos can carry one
conventional warhead each.
“We have started working
on the multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicles [MIRV]
version [Agni-VI]. It will carry four or six warheads depending upon
their weight,” DRDO missile technologists said. “The constraint is the
vehicle’s mass.”
Although the Union government is
yet to sanction Agni-VI project, the DRDO has done all the enabling
studies, finalised the missile’s design and started working on the
engineering part. It had also figured out how to anchor four or six
warheads in the vehicle, how to disperse them and the pattern of their
dispersal. The warheads could be released in an order, one after
another. If one warhead were to hit a place, another could fall 100 km
away from it, the technologists said.
Both Agni-V
and Agni-VI have three stages, all powered by solid propellants, and
their diameter is two metres. And the comparison ends there.
While
Agni-V weighs 50 tonnes and is 17.5 metres long, Agni-VI belongs to the
65-70-tonne class and will be 20 metres long. “Agni-VI will be a
massive vehicle,” the technologists said. It was too early to say when
its first launch would take place. It would be road-mobile and blast off
from trucks with launching platforms.
The Hindu
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