Advertisement

BrahMos cruise missile's first export order soon, deal likely by April-May 2020

BrahMos, world's fastest cruise missile, is likely to be supplied to a third country with the contract for the same most probably to be signed sometime in April or May 2020. The supersonic missile capable of flying at Mach 3 (over 3704 kilometres per hour) is an India-Russia venture and can be launched from land, ship as well as an aircraft.

BrahMos cruise missile's first export order soon, deal likely by April-May 2020

BrahMos, world's fastest cruise missile, is likely to be supplied to a third country with the contract for the same most probably to be signed sometime in April or May 2020. The supersonic missile capable of flying at Mach 3 (over 3704 kilometres per hour) is an India-Russia venture and can be launched from land, ship as well as an aircraft.

"We expect (signing the agreement) sometime in April or May," the Chief General Manager (Marketing, Promotion and Export) of BrahMos Aerospace Praveen Pathak was quoted as saying by Russian news agency TASS. However, Pathak did not mention the country or countries interested in buying BrahMos although he added that talks are currently underway with some prospective buyers.

India's all three defence forces - Indian Army, Indian Air Force (IAF) and Indian Navy - operate the BrahMos. While the Indian Army and Indian Navy have had the BrahMos in their arsenal for the last several years, the IAF inducted its first Sukhoi Su-30MKIs equipped with the air-launched supersonic cruise missile in 222 Tigersharks Squadron at the Thanjavur air force station on Monday (January 20, 2020).

The air-launched BrahMos has a range of 400 kilometres while the land and sea version of the missile can hit a target 290 kms away. Developed jointly by Russia's Research and Production Association of Machine-Building and India's Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), the BrahMos is a medium-range ramjet supersonic cruise missile.

While the missiles with the Indian Army and Indian Navy weigh 3,000 kilogrammes, the version in service with the IAF is 500 kgs lighter. The missile has a conventional warhead of 200-300 kgs with a cruising altitude of up to 15 km and the terminal altitude of only 10 metres which means BrahMos becomes virtually undetectable to the enemy radar and defence systems because it is extremely close to the ground.