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India
testfires N-capable Agni-I missile
NEW DELHI—India on Sunday test fired a medium-range nuclear-capable
ballistic missile capable of hitting most targets in neighbouring
Pakistan, a defence official said.
The Agni-1 missile, which has a range of more than 700 kilometres (430
miles), was fired at 10:15 am (0445 GMT) from an island off the coast of
the eastern state of Orissa, the official said. “The user trial of the
missile passed the requisite expectations,” said the official, speaking
on condition of anonymity.
The Agni — Sanskrit for “fire” — is a 12-metre (39-foot) medium-range
ballistic missile that can be fired from mobile launchers and can carry
a one-tonne warhead. In April, India staged a successful test of Agni-III,
its longest range ballistic missile capable of transporting a nuclear
warhead more than 3,000 kilometres, putting targets deep inside China
within its reach.
India, which held nuclear weapons tests in 1998, has developed a series
of nuclear and conventional missile systems as part of a missile
development programme launched in 1983.
The Agni series is one of five developed by India’s Defence Research and
Development Organisation.—Agencies |