http://indianexpress.com/article/explained/interceptor-missile-tested-7-times-drdos-rajinikanth-moment-still-far/

EXPLAINED
MONDAY, MAY 04, 2015

Interceptor missile tested 7 times, DRDO's Rajinikanth moment still far

A Ballistic Missile Defence system is based on an interceptor missile
shooting down an enemy missile mid-air. It needs ground radars,
command-and-control systems and data links. India's BMD does not yet
have geo-stationary satellites.

Written by Sushant Singh | New Delhi | Updated: May 4, 2015 3:20 am

The proposed Ballistic Missile Defence system is supposed to blow
enemy n-missiles out of the sky as they fly towards Delhi. But last
month's test failed, and many questions remain unanswered.

DRDO's promises and seven tests notwithstanding, the plan to put a
nuclear missile defence shield over Delhi remains a work in progress.

The unsuccessful test of an interceptor missile last month swung the
spotlight back on the proposed Ballistic Missile Defence (BMD) system.
Think of Rajinikanth firing a bullet to destroy the bullet fired by
the villain in mid-air. That's what a BMD system does: it provides a
city with a protective shield where an incoming enemy ballistic
missile is shot down by interceptor missiles.

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Besides the interceptors, a BMD consists of radars -- satellite-,
ground-, and sea-based -- to detect and track a missile and its
warhead, data communication links to pass on the information, and a
command and control system.

DRDO first spoke of a BMD system in December 2007. All building blocks
for Phase 1 of a two-layered, fully integrated system were to be in
place by 2010. In March 2010, Dr V K Saraswat of DRDO promised initial
systems deployment by 2013.

ballistic-missile-graph

On May 7, 2012, DRDO declared it had developed a Missile Defence
Shield that could be put in place at short notice at two selected
locations in the country, presumably Delhi and Mumbai. The system
would be able to tackle incoming ballistic missiles of range up to
2,000 km. DRDO also said that long-range tracking radars, real-time
data-link and mission control systems needed for the perationalisation
of the BMD had been "realised".

The fact is the BMD system is at the moment not even close to being
put into operation. Last month's unsuccessful test at the Chandipur
range was the seventh time the BMD interceptor missile has been
tested. It was its second failed test, although the first failure was
not of an interceptor, but due to a faulty target missile.

Washington-based emerging and space technologies expert Dr Bharath
Gopalaswamy said, "Interceptor technologies are test-intensive and
never foolproof. We have to wait until DRDO releases the data for
these tests -- which I suspect they never will -- but for the moment, I
would contextualise this as part of a routine test phase."

A senior DRDO official told The Indian Express that they hoped to
conduct another test within a couple of months. "It is part of the
development process. This was the first time we launched the
interceptor missile from a canister. The target was also a more
difficult one than the simulated Prithvi missiles used earlier," the
DRDO official said.

According to Gopalaswamy, this is something to be expected with
hit-to-kill technologies. "Dr Saraswat (former DRDO chief) declared
missile defence capabilities as operational but the failure in such
tests exposes the vulnerabilities in the system," he said.

MILES TO GO
According to Air Marshal (retd) M Matheswaran, "a development trial by
DRDO will not result in an operational system so soon. We can only
expect to get a technology demonstrator at the end of the ongoing
tests. Even the US took three decades to produce a BMD system. A fully
mature BMD system is at least a decade away. The political leadership
must be made aware of this reality".

The BMD system was proposed to India's political leadership by Dr APJ
Abdul Kalam  in the mid-1990s, a former cabinet secretary told The
Indian Express. It was triggered by Pakistan's acquisition of M-11
missiles from China. The proposal was to provide cover for Delhi,
Mumbai and two other strategically important sites. DRDO is believed
to have started work on the programme in 1999.

The armed forces were brought into the loop only a decade later, a
senior Indian Air Force officer told The Indian Express. A BMD system
cannot be operated in isolation; it has to be networked with existing
IAF sensors for better situational awareness to avoid friendly fire,
or shooting down of own aircraft or missiles. IAF already has a fully
integrated air defence system, and the complexities of deployment will
have to be resolved as and when the BMD is put into operation.

"There is no direct involvement of the armed forces in its development
even now. The IAF, which is the end user, must be closely involved,"
Matheswaran said.

DO WE NEED IT?
Many experts argue that the BMD can take on only a limited number of
incoming missiles, and will invite saturation salvos from the enemy.
Western non-proliferation activists have said India's BMD will
encourage Pakistan to expand its nuclear arsenal to fire multiple
missiles. Bharat Karnad of the Centre for Policy Research said BMD was
a "hit-and-miss" system whose reliability has been questioned by
various US studies.

Last year, the US General Accountability Office questioned the
reliability and efficacy of the Pentagon's Ground-based Midcourse
Defense (GMD) programme, a system similar to India's BMD. The Pentagon
accepted that the GMD system provides "a limited capability against a
simple threat". Senator Tom Coburn's report last year estimated the
GMD system's success rate at 30 per cent. DRDO has, on the other hand,
promised 99.8 per cent reliability for its BMD system.

Unlike the GMD, BMD does not have early warning radars or satellite
tracking of an enemy missile. The delayed detection capability reduces
the time available for interception of, say, a Pakistani missile to
around five minutes. Also, the BMD system can only intercept missiles
launched from 900-1,000 km away; the Chinese Dong Feng-21 ballistic
missile with a range of 1,700-2,000 km cannot be intercepted.

The BMD is expensive. Ballpark estimates for defending one Indian city
vary from Rs 1 lakh crore to Rs 2.5 lakh crore. At the higher range,
it is more than India's annual defence budget. The US continental
system is estimated to have cost more than $ 100 billion so far, the
GMD system $ 41 billion.

"A system that doesn't work, costs a lot, and can't handle multiple
attacks will breed a false sense of security and compound our
problems. All this talk of deployability of a BMD is premature. What
we need at best is a technology demonstrator," Karnad said.

"We have no expert committee like the US JASON to validate projects
like the BMD. India has scarce resources. To use them judiciously, a
high-level technical committee should validate all strategic projects
proposed by DRDO or the armed forces," he said.

Whatever the case, India's 'Rajinikanth' gun can't fire yet. As the
Americans like to say, "The real problem with ballistic missile
defence is that it is rocket science."
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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