HRK
PDF THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
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dear I understand the scenario and the purpose of Nasr missile and I am not questing these .... the question which is disturbing me is not related to the role of Nasr or its conceptual use but it is exclusively related to NASR as a system demonstrating certain flight characteristic and capabilities in which something is missing (or not known publicly) which is reducing the range.We need to look at the role Nasr is supposed to play.
It's a weapon system designed to be used when Pakistani forces are on the back foot and Indians are advancing and Pakistani military has no means to stop the advancing enemy forces .
So
It's not MLRS and is not supposed to do MLRS job. It's job is to reliability punch a hole in Indian advancing columns who have the upper hand and have access to all sorts of offensive and defensive weaponry .
While Pakistani forces are being pummelled and out of oppositions.
I'm that scenario you need a very reliable weapon which can dodge enemy defenses and cause fairly larger scale damage
In my opinion nasr is pre programmed to make multiple trajectory changes during the flight so that the enemy radar cannot reliability track it and cannot predict its position in the next few tens of seconds for successful interception by a BMD.
However doing so costs kinetic energy which is the only force keeping nasr airborne . The burnout time of the weapon as per my observations is about 10 seconds and there is no power source to propel the missile after that and has to use the kinetic energy. The MLRS follows a parabolic trajectory which is an efficient way of using the kinetic energy from burnt out rocket fuel to get to maximum range. But nasr loses energy while making the multiple in-flight maneuvering Hence low range but very high reliability.
Range does not matter in the scenario in which nasr will be used as in that scenario out armed forces will be fighting a losing battle and enemy will be already close by .
Nasr will be the last ditch effort to punch a hole in enemy lines get behind them Cut off supplies and attack from behind and try to turn the tables
At that time Pakistan will already be on the way of losing the battle and in response to using nasr if India starts an all out nuclear exchange It won't matter for us as we would be already on the way to our doom.
With a tactical nuke mounted on nasr Pakistan will cause an air burst of high energy neutrons covering an area of 2-3 square kilometers per missile mainly disabling Indian ability to advance any further
As it is known that Nasr does not follow pure ballistic trajectory it is somewhat quasi ballistic missile, some of the 400mm artillery rockets which follow pure ballistic trajectories are having range in 250+ Km while Indian Pharar missile with almost the same dimensions as Nasr have 150+ KM range, so something is different in NASR and I want to understand that difference.
Either
- Its warhead weight
- Or early flight manoeuvres to mask the position of launch battery and related C&C systems
(NOTE: these are just my guess I may be totally wrong)