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South Asia’s first MIRV payload

I hope they work on range as well. 2200 limits the missile capability to be launched from anywhere in Pakistan and to cover every inch of India and beyond. Pakistan is in a bad habit of not extending their missile range having some kind of delusion that the threat we face is just from the East and nowhere else.
Even for a threat just from the east, Pak still needs to extend the ranges of its missiles in order to truly complete a true nuclear triad. Babur 3 is a start but it has a rather limited range. Eventually I hope Pak can have some boomers that can operate quite a distance far from home and the missiles on board have enough range to still be able to strike anywhere in India.
 
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Cocksucka, technology doesn’t remain stagnant... it evolves.

Sames the case with Ababel MRV.

they dont understand this because their tech doesnt evolve, it starts as a dud and ends as a dud

its a good strategy by Pakistan, first develop MIRV tech and improve it to perfection and then ICBM (with MIRV), so when alarm bells ring its too late
 
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oka,when the phuck pak is testing icbm?
Only thing we need is range and powerful motor that can carry heavy load. else course of an icbm is being completed now
 
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Only thing we need is range and powerful motor that can carry heavy load. else course of an icbm is being completed now
i suggest you do it fast,in case the democracy dramatists do any more drama to implement democracy ,you should wipe out their democratical arse clean off the map.
 
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Just to clear up the mess Indians have made on this thread

So the chief of intelligence in Pentagon confirms to the senate committee that Pakistan is the first country in Asia to have MIRV missiles and Indians are on here still calling it fake.
because they are.....
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just enjoy the funny posts from Indian members.
 
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oka,when the phuck pak is testing icbm?
When time is right.... Bro shall I tell something more important than a land based ICBM? Sea based ICBM... But that asking Pak to do too much... SO 2500KM SLBM with 6 warheads each should be target..... This ensures 2nd strike capability..... Putting Pakistan in a very good defensive situation.

Hi tech Nation Israel already have 48 SLCM with 1500KM range giving them a 2nd strike capability .... And Jericho III missile which is said to be ICBM.... They also have Space launch vehicle.
 
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I hope they work on range as well. 2200 limits the missile capability to be launched from anywhere in Pakistan and to cover every inch of India and beyond. Pakistan is in a bad habit of not extending their missile range having some kind of delusion that the threat we face is just from the East and nowhere else.
For a BM range means:
1) With x payload and ‘y’trajectory we can reach a minimum of ‘Z1’km and a maximum of ‘Z2’km.

2) Adjust ‘x’ and ‘y’ and ‘Z1’ and ‘Z2’ also change.
 
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We need to extend the range and also capacity of carrying MIRV
A challenge that is not as difficult as once was especially since the development of laser gyroscope which are readily available on the market due to their technological dual use, so from navigation, propulsion to stabilisation and terminal guidance, every aspect of a missile systems is now at an operators fingertips.Kudos Hazrat

Bava g keun marvaindy o sano.. hahaha
:lol:....CORRECTION Hazrat sahib
 
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Pakistan has tested a ballistic missile with a multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle (MIRV), the United States confirmed this week.

During testimony to Congress outlining worldwide threats on March 6, Robert Ashley, the director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), stated: “In January 2017, Pakistan conducted the first test launch of its nuclear-capable Ababeel ballistic missile, demonstrating South Asia’s first MIRV payload.” It appeared to be the first time a U.S. official publicly confirmed that Islamabad tested a MIRVed missile; however, in a report last year on missile threats around the world, the Defense Intelligence Ballistic Missile Analysis Committee noted, “In January 2017, [Pakistan] began testing the MIRVed Ababeel MRBM.”

MIRVs allow a single missile to deliver multiple warheads against different targets.





The Pakistani military first announced its test of the MIRVed missile on January 24, 2017. “Pakistan has conducted its first successful flight test of Surface to Surface Ballistic Missile Ababeel, which has a maximum range of 2,200 kilometers,” the military announced in a press release at the time. “The missile is capable of delivering multiple warheads, using Multiple Independent Re-entry Vehicle (MIRV) technology.” The statement added that the test was aimed at “validating various design and technical parameters.” No other tests of the Ababeel missiles are known to have taken place since the first one.

Despite these claims, many outside experts questioned whether Pakistan really had developed or tested a MIRV. As the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Missile Defense Project noted, “Some experts have expressed skepticism as to whether Pakistan has indeed surmounted the various technological hurdles required for MIRVed missiles. MIRV warheads are typically much smaller than unitary warheads, and thus require greater miniaturization. It is unclear if the country has manufactured a miniaturized nuclear warhead small enough to use in a MIRV.” Ashley’s confirmation should put this skepticism to rest.

Development of the Ababeel missile is believed to have begun in the mid-to-late 2000s, and the missile’s design is similar to other Pakistani solid-fuel medium-range ballistic missiles, such as the Shaheen II and Shaheen III, according to CSIS’s Missile Defense Project. Unlike those missiles— which both have two stages— the Ababeel is a three stage missile. The BBC reported back in 2010 that Pakistani missile designers were receiving substantial assistance from China in developing MIRV technology. The Ababeel appears to have a large nose cone, which may allow it to carry multiple warheads even if they are slightly larger than normal MIRVed warheads.

Islamabad’s stated rationale for pursuing MIRV technology is to defeat India’s ballistic-missile defense systems. “Development of Ababeel Weapon System is aimed at ensuring survivability of Pakistan’s ballistic missiles in the growing regional Ballistic Missile Defence (BMD) environment,” the Pakistani military said in the statement announcing the test last January. “This will further reinforce deterrence.”

MIRVs are undoubtedly useful for defeating missile defenses, as they present numerous targets in close range that interceptors must locate and destroy. At the same time, MIRVs are extremely valuable for counterforce attacks—that is, trying to destroy an adversary’s nuclear arsenal in a surprise first strike. In that sense, they are extremely destabilizing for strategic stability; during the Cold War MIRVs greatly exacerbated the nuclear arms race between the two superpowers.

n an essay on MIRVs during the Cold War, Brendan Rittenhouse Green and Austin Long noted that the Cold War strategic arms race seemed to be stabilizing by the mid-1960s. “But the objective of strategic stability proved illusory,” they write. “The advent of multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicles (MIRVs), more powerful warhead yields, and improved missile accuracy enabled both superpowers to target hardened military facilities.” This forced them to build more weapons to ensure the survivability of their arsenals. Both sides quickly came to regret not banning MIRVs before their introduction. And, shortly after the Cold War ended, they agreed to ban all land-based MIRVs in the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START II). That treaty was signed but never went into effect.

MIRVs could be especially destabilizing for countries like China, India and Pakistan. Unlike the Cold War superpowers, Beijing, Delhi and Islamabad have maintained relatively small nuclear arsenals that are believed to number in the low hundreds, compared to the tens of thousands the Soviet Union and the United States had during the Cold War. That means their arsenals will be especially vulnerable to powerful counterforce capabilities, like MIRVs. That is why I once called the emergence of Asian MIRVs the most dangerous nuclear threat no one was talking about.




Pakistan is not the first country in Asia to test a MIRVed missile. That distinction belongs to China. It is unclear when China initially tested a MIRVed missile, but the Pentagon first acknowledged that Beijing had that capability in its 2015 report on Chinese military power. France, Britain, Russia and the United States also have MIRVed missiles. During his time in office, President Barack Obama removed all MIRVs on America’s land-based ballistic missiles, but Washington continues to have MIRVed submarine-launched ballistic missiles.

Now that Pakistan and China have them, it seems inevitable that India will join the MIRV club sooner rather than later.

Zachary Keck (@ZacharyKeck) is a former managing editor of the National Interest.

http://nationalinterest.org/blog/th...ted-the-ultimate-nuclear-missile-24834?page=1
 
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Are we taking the approach of Babure Development cycle ? First test, We tested propulsion, structural integrity, Second test after 7 months where guidance and electronics began testing ? Though it took 7 years to get babur Operational. Do you think it will take a minimum of 5-7 years to get Ababeel operational ?
Not really. Babur was a totally new technology. This is something tried and tested with an add-on feature that have been evaluated once and we will keep doing it again and again to iron out if there are any issues.
 
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