India's Key Missile Systems — Beyond IGMDP 🚀
Complete UPSC Notes — BrahMos, Astra, Pralay, Nirbhay, Pinaka, Rudram, Dhanush, Shaurya, Mission Shakti ASAT. Updated with Operation Sindoor 2025, IRF, and April 2026 current affairs.
10-Second Revision
All Indian Missiles — Master Summary Table
📋 Part A — Specifications
| Missile | Type | Range | Speed | Payload | Fuel |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BrahMosDRDO + Russia JV | Supersonic Cruise | 300–450 km (800 km under dev.) | Mach 2.8–3 | 200–300 kg | Solid (1st) + Liquid ramjet (2nd) |
Astra Mk1India's 1st BVRAAM | Air-to-Air BVR | 80–110 km | Mach 4.5+ | 15 kg | Solid ducted ramjet |
PralaySurface-to-Surface | Quasi-ballistic | 150–500 km | Supersonic | 500–1,000 kg | Solid |
PrahaarTactical Battlefield | Tactical Ballistic | 150 km | Supersonic | 200–500 kg | Solid |
NirbhayIndia's 1st Long-Range Cruise | Subsonic Cruise | 1,000 km (LR-LACM: 1,500 km) | Mach 0.6–0.7 | 200–300 kg | Solid booster + turbofan |
DhanushNaval Prithvi | Ship-launched Ballistic | 350 km | Mach 2 | 500 kg | Liquid |
ShauryaLand-based SLBM equivalent | Hypersonic Ballistic | 700–800 km | Mach 7–8 | 200 kg | Solid (canisterised) |
Rudram-1India's 1st Anti-Radiation | Anti-Radiation | Up to 200 km | Mach 0.6–2.0 | Fragmentation warhead | Solid |
PinakaMulti-Barrel Rocket | MBRL System | 70–120 km | Supersonic | Various (HE, cluster, incendiary) | Solid |
Mission Shakti ASATAnti-Satellite Weapon | ASAT / Space | Up to 1,200 km altitude | ~10 km/s | Kinetic kill vehicle | Multi-stage solid |
📌 Part B — Launch Platform & Status
| Missile | Launch Platform | Developed By | Status | Key UPSC Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BrahMos | Land, Air (Su-30MKI), Sea | DRDO + Russia (NPOM) JV | Operational — all 3 services | Named: Brahmaputra + Moskva. 1st combat use: Op Sindoor May 2025. Philippines export 2022. 800 km variant by 2027. |
| Astra Mk1 | Air (Su-30MKI, Tejas, Rafale) | DRDO / Research Centre Imarat | Operational (IAF) | 1st indigenous air-to-air BVR missile. Mk2 (150 km) in development. Astra Mk1A with active seeker — trials ongoing. |
| Pralay | Road-mobile (TEL) | DRDO / Research Centre Imarat | User trials completed July 2025; induction imminent | Quasi-ballistic — manoeuvres in flight. Core of IRF. 120 inducted, 250 more planned. Armenia interested in export. |
| Prahaar | Road-mobile | DRDO | Under evaluation | Faster reaction time than Prithvi. Replaces Prithvi-I as tactical surface-to-surface for Army. |
| Nirbhay | Land, Air, Sea (Submarine) | ADE / DRDO | Limited deployment on LAC; user trials expected soon | 1st indigenous long-range subsonic cruise missile. LR-LACM variant: 1,500 km. DAC approved Feb 2024. Terrain-hugging at 50–4,000 m altitude. |
| Dhanush | Ship-launched (INS Subhadra) | DRDO (naval Prithvi variant) | Operational (Indian Navy) | Sea-based nuclear deterrence. Can carry nuclear warheads. Launched from stealth-configured ships. Gyroscope-stabilised for sea launch. |
| Shaurya | Land (canister-launched from underground) | DRDO | Operational | Land-based equivalent of K-15 (SLBM). Hypersonic speed (Mach 7). Near-impossible to intercept. Can carry nuclear warhead. Canister launch = quick response. |
| Rudram-1 | Air (Su-30MKI) | DRDO / Research Centre Imarat | Operational 2022 | 1st indigenous anti-radiation missile. Destroys enemy radar by homing on radio frequency emissions. Passive seeker — fires from 500m to 15km altitude. |
| Pinaka | Land (truck-mounted MBRL) | DRDO / ARDE | Operational (Indian Army) | IRNSS-guided rockets. Extended range up to 120 km. 6 more regiments inducted 2024. Armenia = export customer. Fire 12 rockets in 44 seconds. |
| Mission Shakti ASAT | Land (PDV Mk-II interceptor) | DRDO + ISRO | Tested March 2019 | India = 4th ASAT nation (USA, Russia, China, India). Kinetic kill at 283 km LEO. Can target up to 1,200 km. NOT same as Mission Divyastra (2024). |
BrahMos — World's Fastest Operational Cruise Missile
BrahMos Supersonic Cruise Missile
BrahMos is a two-stage supersonic cruise missile — solid propellant engine in first stage, liquid ramjet in second. It is the world's fastest operationally deployed cruise missile, travelling at nearly 3 times the speed of sound, giving it kinetic energy so high that even a conventional warhead causes massive destruction. The "fire-and-forget" principle means the missile guides itself to target without further operator input after launch.
- Named after rivers Brahmaputra (India) and Moskva (Russia) — reflects the JV partnership
- Operates in all weather, day and night. Low radar signature. Terrain-hugging capability
- India's entry into MTCR (June 2016) allowed range extension from 290 km to 450 km
- As of July 2024: 40 Su-30MKI jets modified to carry air-launched BrahMos; 84 more under Super Sukhoi upgrade
- Navy: 20 frontline warships equipped; Navy ordered 220 BrahMos-ER (Mar 2024, ₹19,518 crore)
- First batch of BrahMos produced in UP facility (Oct 2025). India signed two new export contracts ~$455 million (Oct 2025)
- BrahMos-NG (Next Gen): 50% lighter (1.5 tonnes), 6m length, AESA seeker. Submarine + air-launched variants
- BrahMos-II (Mach 7–8): Hypersonic version, in development with Russia (expected 7–8 years)
Astra — India's First BVR Air-to-Air Missile
Astra Beyond Visual Range Air-to-Air Missile (BVRAAM)
Astra is India's first completely indigenous beyond-visual-range air-to-air missile — meaning it can destroy enemy aircraft before the pilot can even see them. A BVR missile uses active radar guidance: the missile finds and locks onto the target on its own. Astra uses a solid fuel ducted ramjet — providing sustained thrust at supersonic speeds across its entire flight, making it highly manoeuvrable throughout.
- All-weather capability; can engage targets in day/night/adverse weather
- Can destroy enemy aircraft flying at supersonic speeds; designed for high off-boresight engagement
- Integrated with Su-30MKI (operational) and Tejas Mk1A (integration ongoing)
- Astra Mk1A: updated active seeker — trials ongoing 2024–25. Integration with Tejas lags due to Israeli radar code issues (as of 2025)
- Astra Mk2: Range extended to 150+ km; development ongoing — will match Western BVRAAMs like Meteor
Pralay — India's Tactical Quasi-Ballistic Missile
Pralay Surface-to-Surface Quasi-Ballistic Missile
Pralay is a game-changing tactical missile — a quasi-ballistic missile, meaning it travels like a ballistic missile for most of its flight but then manoeuvres in the terminal phase to evade enemy anti-ballistic missile (ABM) interceptors. This makes it extremely difficult for Pakistan's HQ-9 air defence or any ABM system to intercept. It can carry different warhead types: high-explosive, submunition, or anti-runway. Targets: enemy air bases, logistics nodes, command centres, missile batteries.
- Fills the critical gap between Agni series (strategic, long range) and Pinaka rockets (short range)
- Core of India's proposed Integrated Rocket Force (IRF) — non-nuclear precision strike force
- Extended range variant: 400 km confirmed in development (Times of India, Sep 2024)
- Road-mobile — fast reaction, hard to detect and destroy before launch
- India has 120 Pralay missiles inducted, plans to induct 250 more per IRF requirements
Nirbhay — India's Long-Range Subsonic Cruise Missile
Nirbhay Long-Range Land Attack Cruise Missile (LR-LACM)
Nirbhay is India's equivalent of the USA's Tomahawk cruise missile — a long-range, terrain-hugging, all-weather subsonic cruise missile that flies extremely low (as low as 50 metres) to avoid radar detection. It can navigate complex terrain by following contours, making it very difficult to intercept. Unlike BrahMos (supersonic but shorter range and higher altitude after initial phase), Nirbhay sacrifices speed for range and stealthy low-altitude penetration.
- Can loiter around a target and re-engage — unique "loitering" capability among Indian missiles
- Multi-platform launch: land vehicle, air (fighter jets), sea surface, and submarine torpedo tubes (SLCM variant: 500 km range)
- Guided by INS + radio altimeter + GPS/NavIC. Can carry conventional and nuclear warheads
- Two-stage: solid rocket booster for takeoff → Manik turbofan engine for sustained cruise flight
- Currently deployed in limited numbers on LAC (Line of Actual Control) as China deterrent
Other Key Missiles — Rudram, Pinaka, Dhanush, Prahaar, Shaurya
Rudram-1 — India's First Anti-Radiation Missile
Rudram-1 is India's first indigenous Anti-Radiation Missile (ARM) — it homes in on enemy radar, communication systems, and any Radio Frequency (RF) emitting source and destroys it. The principle: enemy radar emits radio waves to detect aircraft. Rudram's passive seeker detects those radio waves and guides the missile straight to the radar source. Destroying enemy radar is the first step in "Suppression of Enemy Air Defences (SEAD)" — allowing Indian jets to fly through without being tracked. Rudram-2 (longer range) and Rudram-3 (even longer) are in development.
Pinaka — Multi-Barrel Rocket Launch System
Pinaka is India's homegrown answer to Israel's LYNX and Russia's BM-30 Smerch rocket systems. Named after Lord Shiva's divine bow. Its rockets are guided by India's NavIC satellite system — reducing dependence on GPS. Can fire 12 rockets in 44 seconds, saturating a large target area (1 km² per salvo) with lethal precision. Used in Kargil War (1999). Currently 6 additional Pinaka regiments being inducted (2024) — reinforcing India's long-range artillery doctrine after lessons from Russia-Ukraine war. Armenia procured Pinaka — one of India's major defence export successes.
🚢 Dhanush — Naval Prithvi
Naval variant of the Prithvi-III ballistic missile. Sea-to-sea and sea-to-land capability. Gyroscope-stabilised for accurate sea-launch. Nuclear-capable — contributes to India's sea leg of nuclear triad alongside K-15/K-4 SLBMs. Launched from INS Subhadra and other warships.
⚡ Shaurya — Hypersonic Canister Missile
Land-based equivalent of the K-15 (submarine-launched missile). Hypersonic speed (Mach 7) makes interception near-impossible. Canister-launched — can be stored underground, ensuring survivability against first strike. High manoeuvrability — classified as a hypersonic vehicle. Nuclear deterrent. Operational with Strategic Forces Command.
🎯 Prahaar — Quick-Reaction Tactical
Solid-fuel, quick-reaction surface-to-surface tactical ballistic missile. Designed to replace Prithvi-I at tactical level. High accuracy — can engage moving targets. Fast reaction time makes it ideal for time-critical battlefield targets. Bridges gap between Pinaka rockets and longer-range ballistic missiles like Pralay.
🌐 Hypersonic Missile Test — Nov 2024
India tested a long-range hypersonic missile in November 2024 — becoming one of very few countries with this technology (USA, Russia, China). A hypersonic missile flies at Mach 5+ while manoeuvring, making it nearly impossible to intercept. This puts India in an elite group for next-generation missile capability. DRDO's hypersonic programme building on Shaurya technology.
Mission Shakti — India's Anti-Satellite (ASAT) Weapon
🛰️ Mission Shakti — March 27, 2019
In March 2019, India conducted Mission Shakti — successfully destroying a live Indian satellite (Microsat-R) in Low Earth Orbit at 283 km altitude using a ground-launched interceptor missile (PDV Mk-II). PM Modi personally announced the success. India became the 4th country in the world to demonstrate ASAT capability — joining USA (1985), Russia (1970s), and China (2007).
How it works: An ASAT missile is launched from the ground, tracks the target satellite using onboard radar, and physically destroys it using kinetic kill technology — the missile hits the satellite at ~10 km/second, releasing energy equivalent to a small explosion. No warhead required — pure kinetic energy.
Why it matters: Modern warfare is satellite-dependent (GPS, communication, surveillance, missile guidance). The ability to destroy enemy satellites can blind their military — disabling GPS-guided weapons, cutting battlefield communications, and ending real-time ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance). An ASAT capability is thus a strategic deterrent and a powerful bargaining chip.
DRDO + ISRO joint programme. Used existing PDV (Prithvi Defence Vehicle) Mk-II interceptor from India's ballistic missile defence programme — repurposed for ASAT. Critical debate: space debris from ASAT tests risks the ISS and other satellites. India promised to minimise debris.
Integrated Rocket Force (IRF) — India's New Missile Command
🎯 India's Integrated Rocket Force (IRF) — 2024–25
Inspired by the Russia-Ukraine war's lesson that conventional precision missiles are as decisive as nuclear weapons, India is establishing an Integrated Rocket Force — a dedicated military command for conventional (non-nuclear) ballistic and cruise missiles. Core missiles: Pralay (120 inducted, 250 more planned) + BrahMos + LR-LACM/Nirbhay + future hypersonic weapons. The IRF enables India to conduct precision strikes on enemy military infrastructure (air bases, missile launchers, logistics nodes) without crossing the nuclear threshold — a doctrine shaped by the Cold Start problem.
Current Affairs — 2024, 2025 & 2026
May 2025BrahMos — First Combat Use (Op Sindoor)
BrahMos achieved its historic first battlefield deployment in Operation Sindoor (May 2025) — striking multiple high-value Pakistani targets with precision after the Pahalgam terror attack. Validated India's precision-strike credibility globally. India accelerating BrahMos production and development thereafter.
Aug 2025110 Air-Launched BrahMos — ₹10,800 Cr
DAC cleared procurement of 110 BrahMos air-launched cruise missiles for IAF at ₹10,800 crore (August 2025). Also cleared 8 BrahMos fire control systems and vertical launchers for Navy (₹650 crore). 20 Navy warships already equipped. Navy sought 800 km variant in March 2024 order.
Jul 2025Pralay Phase-1 User Trials Complete
DRDO completed two consecutive Pralay user evaluation trials — 28–29 July 2025 from Abdul Kalam Island, Odisha. DRDO chief confirmed this paves way for induction. Validated max and min range capability. Armenia remains interested in export. Core of India's IRF.
Mar 2025BrahMos-ER — ₹20,000 Cr Order
DAC cleared procurement of additional BrahMos Extended Range (ER) regiments worth ₹20,000 crore (March 2025). 800 km BrahMos trials ongoing — readiness expected 2027. Modified ramjet engine largely complete; hybrid NavIC+INS navigation being finalised. Sub-metre accuracy confirmed.
Nov 2024India Tests Long-Range Hypersonic Missile
India successfully tested a long-range hypersonic missile in November 2024 — flying at Mach 5+ while manoeuvring. India became one of very few countries (after USA, Russia, China) with demonstrated hypersonic missile capability. DRDO-developed system; further specifications classified.
Feb 2024LR-LACM Nirbhay — DAC Approved ₹4,000 Cr
DAC approved procurement of Long Range Land Attack Cruise Missile (LR-LACM) for Indian Army at ₹4,000 crore (February 2024). Air Force approval in November 2023. 1,500 km range variant of Nirbhay. Navy integration via UVLM (used for BrahMos). Anti-ship variant testing commenced April 2024.
Oct 2025BrahMos Production Facility — UP
The BrahMos production facility in Uttar Pradesh manufactured its first batch of missiles in October 2025. India also signed two new export contracts for BrahMos (~$455 million total) in October 2025. Vietnam, UAE, Indonesia, Brazil exploring procurement. Philippine delivery ongoing.
2024Pinaka — 6 More Regiments + NavIC Upgrade
Indian Army inducting 6 additional Pinaka MBRL regiments in 2024 — adding "more punch and lethality" per Army DG Artillery. Pinaka Extended Range (120 km) operational. NavIC satellite navigation integration complete. Armenia export ongoing. Lessons from Russia-Ukraine war accelerating Pinaka induction.
Memory Tricks & Quick Revision Table
| Fact | Answer |
|---|---|
| India's 1st indigenous BVRAAM (air-to-air) | Astra |
| India's 1st anti-radiation missile | Rudram-1 (operational 2022) |
| India's 1st long-range subsonic cruise missile | Nirbhay |
| World's fastest operational cruise missile | BrahMos (Mach 2.8–3) |
| BrahMos: named after | Brahmaputra (India) + Moskva (Russia) |
| BrahMos first combat use | Operation Sindoor, May 2025 |
| BrahMos first export customer | Philippines, 2022 |
| BrahMos 800 km variant | Under trials; ready by 2027-end |
| Pralay phase-1 user trials | 28–29 July 2025, Abdul Kalam Island |
| Pralay in India's IRF | 120 inducted; 250 more planned |
| Nirbhay LR-LACM range | 1,500 km (DAC approved Feb 2024) |
| Mission Shakti date | 27 March 2019 |
| India's ASAT rank | 4th nation (USA, Russia, China, India) |
| Mission Shakti altitude | 283 km LEO |
| Pinaka navigation system | IRNSS / NavIC (indigenous satellite system) |
| Shaurya speed | Mach 7–8 (hypersonic) |
| India hypersonic missile test | November 2024 |
| Mission Shakti ≠ Mission Divyastra | Shakti (2019) = ASAT | Divyastra (Mar 2024) = Agni-V MIRV |
Previous Year Questions (PYQs)
1. It is a joint programme of DRDO and ISRO.
2. It made India a space power by successfully testing an ASAT weapon.
3. It was launched to develop a capability to destroy enemy communications satellites.
Select: (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) 1 and 2 (d) 1, 2 and 3
1. A joint venture between India and Russia
2. A supersonic cruise missile
3. Named after the rivers Brahmaputra and Moskva
Which of the above is/are correct? (a) 1 only (b) 1 and 2 (c) 2 and 3 (d) 1, 2 and 3
(a) Astra (b) Shaurya (c) Rudram (d) Nirbhay
Prelims Practice MCQs
1. Astra — Anti-tank guided missile
2. Rudram — Anti-radiation missile
3. Nirbhay — Long-range subsonic cruise missile
4. Pralay — Quasi-ballistic surface-to-surface missile
Select: (a) 1 and 2 (b) 2, 3 and 4 (c) 1, 2 and 3 (d) 2 and 4 only
Mains Answer Framework
India's missile programme has evolved dramatically beyond IGMDP — from conventional precision-strike systems to anti-satellite weapons. BrahMos (world's fastest cruise missile, Mach 2.8–3) achieved its historic first combat use during Operation Sindoor (May 2025), validating India's precision-strike credibility. The programme demonstrates India's transition from an arms-importing nation to a credible indigenous missile power.
India has developed a comprehensive missile ecosystem: Astra (first indigenous BVRAAM, 80–110 km), Pralay (quasi-ballistic, manoeuvring, 150–500 km — core of the new Integrated Rocket Force with 120 inducted), Nirbhay (first indigenous long-range cruise missile, 1,000 km; LR-LACM variant 1,500 km approved 2024), Rudram-1 (first anti-radiation missile, destroys enemy radar), Pinaka (NavIC-guided MBRL with 6 new regiments), and Shaurya (hypersonic at Mach 7). Mission Shakti (March 2019) made India the 4th ASAT nation. India's hypersonic missile test (November 2024) placed India in another elite group.
India's missile diversity — covering air-to-air, cruise, quasi-ballistic, anti-radiation, hypersonic, and anti-satellite domains — reflects a maturing strategic autonomy. The establishment of the Integrated Rocket Force and record BrahMos export orders (Philippines, Indonesia) underscore India's emergence as both a capable missile power and a credible defence exporter.
India's missile programme has evolved from the foundational IGMDP (1983–2008) to a sophisticated multi-domain arsenal spanning conventional precision strike, air superiority, electronic warfare suppression, hypersonic systems, and space-denial weapons. The operational validation of BrahMos during Operation Sindoor (May 2025) — its first battlefield use — marked a watershed moment, transforming India's status from an ambitious missile developer to a battle-proven precision-strike power.
Astra Mk1, India's first indigenous Beyond Visual Range air-to-air missile (BVRAAM, 80–110 km), is now operational on Su-30MKI and Tejas platforms — enabling Indian jets to engage enemies before visual range. Rudram-1, the first indigenous Anti-Radiation Missile (ARM, 200 km), destroys enemy radar by homing on radio-frequency emissions — the cornerstone of Suppression of Enemy Air Defences (SEAD) capability, critical for any offensive air campaign.
BrahMos (Mach 2.8–3, 300–450 km; 800 km under development) remains India's primary conventional strike weapon — deployed across all three services, with 40 Su-30MKIs modified for air-launch and 20 warships equipped. The Pralay quasi-ballistic missile (150–500 km, manoeuvring trajectory that evades ABM systems) completed user trials in July 2025 — with 120 inducted and 250 more planned, forming the core of India's new Integrated Rocket Force. Nirbhay (first long-range subsonic cruise missile, 1,000 km; LR-LACM variant at 1,500 km approved 2024) provides terrain-hugging deep-strike capability comparable to the American Tomahawk.
Mission Shakti (March 2019) made India the 4th ASAT nation — capable of destroying enemy satellites in Low Earth Orbit (demonstrated at 283 km). In November 2024, India tested a long-range hypersonic missile (Mach 5+), joining only USA, Russia, and China in this domain. The Shaurya missile (Mach 7, 700–800 km, canister-launched) provides an additional nuclear-capable hypersonic strike option that is virtually impossible to intercept.
India's missile ecosystem — spanning BVR air combat (Astra), radar destruction (Rudram), conventional deep strike (BrahMos, Nirbhay), tactical precision (Pralay, Pinaka), hypersonic deterrence (Shaurya), and space denial (ASAT) — reflects a strategic doctrine of layered deterrence. Record defence exports (Philippines, Indonesia for BrahMos; Armenia for Pralay interest) validate not just capability but international credibility. The establishment of the Integrated Rocket Force synthesises these assets into India's most potent conventional deterrent — raising costs for any adversary contemplating aggression without crossing the nuclear threshold.
Conclusion
From Import Dependency to Battle-Proven Missile Power
India's missile journey is the story of a nation that turned adversity into capability. When the MTCR blocked India's access to cruise missile technology, India built Nirbhay. When imported anti-radiation missiles were not available, India developed Rudram. When tactical strike gaps existed between Pinaka and Agni, India created Pralay. And when questions were raised about India's precision-strike credibility, Operation Sindoor answered with BrahMos strikes of pinpoint accuracy.
Today, India's missile arsenal spans every domain — air-to-air (Astra), supersonic cruise (BrahMos), subsonic cruise (Nirbhay), quasi-ballistic (Pralay), hypersonic (Shaurya, Nov 2024 test), anti-radiation (Rudram), multi-barrel rockets (Pinaka), and space denial (Mission Shakti ASAT). The Integrated Rocket Force synthesises these into a coherent conventional deterrent, while the Agni series and submarine-launched SLBMs maintain nuclear deterrence.
Most significantly, India is no longer just a user of missiles — it is an exporter. BrahMos to Philippines and Indonesia, Pinaka to Armenia, and growing global interest in Pralay — these are the dividends of decades of indigenous missile development under the IGMDP legacy and Atmanirbhar Bharat framework. The missile that began as a symbol of technological aspiration has become a symbol of strategic power and sovereign confidence.


