Bhubaneswar: India on Friday successfully test-fired
indigenously-developed nuclear-capable surface-to-surface Agni-I missile
from a military base in Odisha, a defence official said.
The missile, which can strike a target 700 km away and can carry a one tonne nuclear warhead, was tested by the armed forces from a facility on Wheeler Island near Dhamra in Bhadrak district, 170 km from Bhubaneswar.
"It hit the target with hundred per cent accuracy. It was a perfect test," director of the Integrated Test Range, MVKV Prasad, told IANS. "This was another user trial with a short range."
\Amongst those who witnessed the test were Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) chief VK Saraswat.Agni
is an intermediate range ballistic missile. It uses solid propulsion
booster and a liquid propulsion upper stage, derived from India's first
indigenously developed ballistic missile Prithvi.
The missile, which can strike a target 700 km away and can carry a one tonne nuclear warhead, was tested by the armed forces from a facility on Wheeler Island near Dhamra in Bhadrak district, 170 km from Bhubaneswar.
"It hit the target with hundred per cent accuracy. It was a perfect test," director of the Integrated Test Range, MVKV Prasad, told IANS. "This was another user trial with a short range."
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