Missiles & Iran’s Arsenal – UPSC Mains & Prelims Complete Notes

Missiles & Iran’s Arsenal – UPSC Mains & Prelims Complete Notes | Legacy IAS Bangalore
GS Paper II & III · Defence & Security · Current Affairs

Missiles & Iran’s Arsenal
Complete UPSC Notes

From ballistic missile basics to Iran’s inventory, Israel–Iran escalations, missile defence, and India’s strategic interests — exam-ready material with tables, timelines, answer frameworks, and PYQ mapping.

Updated: March 2026 Sources: CSIS · CRS · IISS · Iran Watch By: Legacy IAS, Bangalore
Section 01

Missile Basics for Prelims

Core concepts, classification, guidance systems, and launch platforms — the building blocks for every missile-related UPSC question.

What Is a Missile? Rocket vs Missile

A rocket is any vehicle propelled by expelling exhaust from a combustion chamber — it follows a pre-set trajectory and has no in-flight guidance. A missile is a rocket that carries a payload (warhead) and includes a guidance & control system allowing it to adjust course toward a target. Think of it this way: all missiles use rocket propulsion, but not all rockets are missiles.

Rocket vs Missile — What’s the Difference?
Rocket
  • Propulsion system
  • Carries a payload
  • No in-flight guidance
  • No course correction
Follows a fixed arc
vs
Missile
  • Propulsion system
  • Carries a payload (warhead)
  • Guidance system on-board
  • Control fins / thrust vectoring
Can adjust mid-flight

Key Missile Types

A. Ballistic Missiles (by range band)

A ballistic missile follows a high arching trajectory — it is powered during the boost phase, then follows a ballistic (unpowered, gravity-driven) path before re-entering the atmosphere toward its target.

ClassRangeKey FeatureExample
SRBM< 1,000 kmTactical, rapid-deploy, road-mobileIran’s Fateh-110; India’s Prithvi
MRBM1,000–3,000 kmRegional deterrenceIran’s Shahab-3 / Sejjil
IRBM3,000–5,500 kmContinental reachIndia’s Agni-III
ICBM> 5,500 kmStrategic nuclear deterrenceIndia’s Agni-V; Russia’s RS-28
Ballistic Missile Flight Profile
Launch Pad Target APOGEE BOOST ▲ — Midcourse (unpowered, ballistic) — ▼ TERMINAL
① Boost Phase Rocket engine fires; powered ascent through atmosphere
② Midcourse Phase Engine off; unpowered ballistic arc above atmosphere
③ Terminal Phase Re-enters atmosphere; descends toward target at high speed

B. Cruise Missiles

A cruise missile flies at a relatively constant speed and altitude (usually low) using aerodynamic lift (wings) and a sustained engine (typically jet or turbofan). It hugs terrain to evade radar.

Types of Cruise Missiles

Land-Attack Cruise Missile (LACM): Strikes ground targets; e.g., US Tomahawk, Iran’s Soumar/Hoveyzeh

Anti-Ship Cruise Missile (ASCM): Targets naval vessels; e.g., India’s BrahMos, Iran’s Noor

Key advantage: Low-altitude flight profile makes them hard to detect; can follow terrain contours.

C. Hypersonic Missiles (Conceptual)

Hypersonic weapons travel at speeds exceeding Mach 5 (~6,100 km/h). Two main types:

HGV vs HCM

Hypersonic Glide Vehicle (HGV): Launched by a rocket booster, then glides unpowered through the upper atmosphere with high maneuverability. Example: Russia’s Avangard, China’s DF-ZF.

Hypersonic Cruise Missile (HCM): Uses a scramjet engine to sustain hypersonic speed through the atmosphere. Example: India-Russia’s BrahMos-II (under development).

UPSC note: Iran claims its Fattah-1 is “hypersonic” — but analysts assess it to be a ballistic missile with a maneuverable re-entry vehicle (MaRV), not a true HGV or HCM.

D. Other Types (1-liner each)

Air-to-Air Missile (AAM): Fired from aircraft at other aircraft (e.g., India’s Astra).
Surface-to-Air Missile (SAM): Ground- or ship-based; shoots down aircraft/missiles (e.g., S-400, Barak-8).
Anti-Tank Guided Missile (ATGM): Precision weapon against armoured vehicles (e.g., India’s Nag, US Javelin).

Guidance & Control

Guidance Layers (Simplified)
⟐ Midcourse Guidance
  • INS — gyroscopes + accelerometers
  • Satellite Aiding — GPS / GLONASS / BeiDou
  • TERCOM — Terrain Contour Matching (cruise missiles)
  • Stellar navigation — star sighting (advanced ICBMs)
◎ Terminal Guidance (Final Approach)
  • Radar seeker — active radar lock on target
  • IR seeker — heat-signature tracking
  • Electro-optical — camera / image matching
  • Anti-radiation — homes on enemy radar emissions

Accuracy: What Is CEP?

CEP — Circular Error Probable

CEP is the radius of a circle around the target within which 50% of all missiles fired are expected to land. A CEP of 30m means half the missiles will land within 30 metres of the aim point. Lower CEP = higher precision. CEP matters because a more precise missile can destroy a target with a smaller warhead, reducing the need for nuclear payloads — which is why Iran has focused heavily on reducing CEP.

Payload: Conventional vs Nuclear

Missiles can carry conventional warheads (high-explosive, submunitions, penetrator) or nuclear warheads. The policy significance: when a country improves missile accuracy (low CEP), the military rationale for nuclear warheads decreases — conventional precision becomes sufficient for strategic targets. However, the same missile platform can potentially deliver either payload, which is why missile proliferation and nuclear programs are closely linked in nonproliferation discourse (relevant for JCPOA debates).

Launch Platforms

PlatformDescriptionAdvantage
TEL (Transporter-Erector-Launcher)Road-mobile truck that transports, raises, and fires the missileHigh survivability — can relocate quickly
SiloHardened underground facility for fixed missilesProtected against attack; used for ICBMs
AircraftAir-launched missiles from fighter jets or bombersFlexible; extends range via aircraft range
Ships / SubmarinesSea-launched from surface ships (VLS) or submarine tubesStealth (subs); forward deployment (ships)

Iran’s doctrine heavily relies on road-mobile TELs for survivability — dispersing launchers across its territory makes pre-emptive strikes difficult.

Section 02

Why Missiles Matter in Modern War

GS3: Security — Deterrence, A2/AD, precision strike, and the escalation dilemma.

Deterrence

Missiles are the primary instrument of deterrence by punishment — the credible threat that any aggression will be met with devastating retaliation. This applies both conventionally (Iran threatening US bases/Israel) and at the nuclear level (India-Pakistan/US-Russia). A large missile arsenal raises the cost of attack for any adversary.

Anti-Access / Area Denial (A2/AD)

The A2/AD concept uses missiles (along with air defences, mines, cyber) to deny an adversary freedom of operation within a geographic zone. Iran’s strategy is a textbook A2/AD case: its missile arsenal threatens every military base, port, and airfield within ~2,000 km, forcing adversaries to operate from further away and invest heavily in missile defence — both expensive propositions.

Precision Strike vs Massed Fires

Modern warfare shows two missile-use paradigms: (a) Precision strike — a few highly accurate missiles to destroy specific high-value targets (command centres, radars, runways), and (b) Massed / saturation fires — overwhelming missile defence by launching large salvos simultaneously. Iran demonstrated both approaches in its 2024-2025 operations.

Missile Defence and the Offence–Defence Cycle

The Cost-Exchange Dilemma

An offensive missile often costs a fraction of the interceptor used to shoot it down. During the June 2025 Israel–Iran war, Iran launched an estimated 550+ ballistic missiles over 12 days. The US reportedly expended over 150 THAAD interceptors (~$12.7M each) and ~80 SM-3 interceptors. The total interception cost was estimated at $1.5+ billion — creating what analysts call an unsustainable cost-exchange ratio favouring the attacker. This dynamic incentivises both offence (cheaper missiles) and shifts defence strategy toward destroying launchers rather than intercepting missiles. (Source: CSIS Missile Defense Project, Dec 2025)

Escalation Ladder: Signalling, Retaliation & Miscalculation

Escalation Ladder (Simplified)
Level 5
Nuclear UseStrategic / existential threshold
Level 4
Strategic Conventional StrikesCities, energy infrastructure, economic targets
← Iran June 2025: 550 MRBMs at Israel
Level 3
Limited Military StrikesBases, radars, military facilities
← Iran Apr 2024: drones + missiles
Level 2
Proxy / Asymmetric AttacksDrones, rockets via non-state proxies
← Houthis, Hezbollah
Level 1
Political SignallingRhetoric, military exercises, threats
← Threats, parades
⚠ Each step risks miscalculation → unintended escalation
Section 03

Iran’s Missile & Drone Strategy

Context: Israel–Iran conflict — doctrine, IRGC, Axis of Resistance.

Why Iran Invested Heavily in Missiles

Four Pillars of Iran’s Missile Logic

1. Sanctions-induced air force gap: Since the 1979 revolution and the subsequent US/Western arms embargo, Iran has been unable to procure modern combat aircraft. Its air force still relies on ageing F-14s, F-4s, and MiG-29s from the 1970s-80s. Missiles became the substitute for air power.

2. Deterrence by punishment: Unable to match US/Israeli conventional military superiority, Iran adopted an asymmetric strategy — using large missile arsenals to threaten devastating retaliation against bases, cities, and energy infrastructure across the region.

3. Regime survival: The Iran-Iraq War (1980-88) — which killed an estimated 500,000+ Iranians — created an existential imperative for self-reliance in long-range strike capability. Iraq’s “War of the Cities” missile attacks traumatised the nation.

4. Regional power projection: Missiles are the backbone of Iran’s claim to regional-power status, allowing it to hold at risk targets across the Middle East without needing expeditionary forces or a blue-water navy.

Role of the IRGC

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) — especially its Aerospace Force — controls Iran’s missile programme, separate from the regular military (Artesh). The IRGC-Aerospace Force manages missile development, production, deployment, and launch operations. The IRGC-Quds Force handles external operations and proxy support. This dual-track structure means missile policy is directly controlled by Iran’s ideological military apparatus, not its conventional defence establishment.

“Axis of Resistance” — Strategic Network

Iran’s Proxy Network — “Axis of Resistance”
IRANIRGC — Quds Force
Hezbollah
Lebanon
N. Israel / Syria front
Houthis
Yemen
Red Sea / Bab el-Mandeb
Iraqi Militias
Iraq
Iraq / Syria / US bases
Hamas / PIJ
Palestine
Gaza
⟶ DIRECT STRIKES — Iran → Israel / US bases
Supplies: Missiles (Fateh variants), drones (Shahed), rockets, ATGMs, technical know-how, funding
Key Doctrine Point for UPSC

Iran’s strategy creates strategic depth through proxies — threatening adversaries from multiple directions simultaneously (Lebanon’s northern front, Yemen’s maritime chokepoint at Bab el-Mandeb, Iraq’s proximity to Gulf bases). This “ring of fire” doctrine meant that attacking Iran would trigger multi-front retaliation. The June 2025 war tested this doctrine severely — Israel had previously degraded Hezbollah’s capability in Lebanon and neutralised Syrian air defences, opening a direct corridor to strike Iran.

Section 04

Iran’s Missile Inventory

The most important section — comprehensive tables with range, role, status, and key notes. Pre-June 2025 war: Iran’s arsenal was estimated at ~2,500 ballistic missiles. Post-war assessments suggest a third to half were destroyed, with active rebuilding underway.

Table A: Ballistic Missiles

Missile Class Range (approx.) Fuel Role / Notes Status
Shahab-1 SRBM 285–330 km Liquid Scud-B derivative; legacy system, low accuracy Operational
Shahab-2 SRBM ~500 km Liquid Scud-C variant; 770 kg payload; may have received guidance upgrades Operational
Fateh-110 SRBM 200–300 km Solid Core tactical system; road-mobile TEL; guidance kit can reduce CEP to ~30m; exported to proxies Operational
Fateh-313 SRBM ~500 km Solid Improved Fateh-110 with extended range and better guidance Operational
Zolfaghar SRBM ~700 km Solid Fateh derivative; carbon-fibre body; submunitions-capable; used in Syria 2017. Anti-ship variant: Zolfaghar Basir Operational
Dezful SRBM ~1,000 km Solid Extended-range Fateh family; bridges SRBM-MRBM gap Reported
Qiam-1 SRBM 700–800 km Liquid Scud-based but no external fins; improved aerodynamics; used in Jan 2020 Iraq strikes; exported to Houthis Operational
Shahab-3 MRBM ~1,300 km Liquid Backbone of regional deterrence; North Korean (Nodong) origin; multiple variants developed Operational
Ghadr-1 / Ghadr-110 MRBM 1,600–2,000 km Liquid Shahab-3 variant; lighter frame; triconic RV halving CEP; can reach Israel, SE Europe Operational
Emad MRBM ~1,700 km Liquid Shahab-3 variant with MaRV (maneuverable re-entry vehicle); assessed CEP ~50m; satellite-aided terminal guidance Operational
Khorramshahr (incl. -1, -2, -4) MRBM ~2,000 km Liquid Iran’s heaviest payload missile (~1,800 kg); Khorramshahr-4 features MaRV with rocket thrusters; potentially nuclear-capable platform; 1.5m diameter nosecone Operational
Sejjil MRBM ~2,000 km Solid Two-stage solid-fuel MRBM — key advantage: much faster launch prep than liquid-fuel systems; harder to pre-empt; carries 500–1,000 kg payload Operational
Kheibar Shekan MRBM ~1,450 km Solid Unveiled 2022; solid-fuel with improved guidance; fast launch preparation Reported
Haj Qassem MRBM ~1,400 km Solid Named after Qasem Soleimani; solid-fuel MRBM Reported
Fattah-1 MRBM ~1,400 km Solid Claimed “hypersonic” — actually a ballistic missile with MaRV (extra solid rocket motor in RV); not a true HGV per Western analysts; designed to defeat missile defence Assessed
Sources: CSIS Missile Threat (updated Mar 2026); Iran Watch; CRS Report R44017; Atlantic Council; Army Recognition. Ranges are assessed/reported; actual performance may vary.

Table B: Cruise Missiles

Missile Type Range (approx.) Key Notes Status
Soumar LACM 700–2,500 km* Derived from Russian/Soviet Kh-55 (obtained from Ukraine 2001); range disputed — likely limited by turbojet engine rather than turbofan of original; ground-launched with booster Reported
Hoveyzeh LACM ~1,350 km Soumar family; unveiled Feb 2019; low-altitude flight; may use turbofan engine; tested to 1,200 km; IRGC Aerospace Force acquisition Operational
Paveh LACM ~1,650 km Soumar family; unveiled Feb 2023; retractable wings; can alter approach path to strike from unexpected direction; Houthi variant = “Quds” Operational
Ya-Ali LACM ~700 km Medium-range; terrain-following capable; smaller and cheaper than Soumar family; likely used turbojet engine Operational
Quds variants LACM 700–1,000 km Export/proxy version of Soumar-family technology; used by Houthis in 2019 Saudi Aramco attack; components traced to Iran Operational
Ra’ad ASCM ~350 km Anti-ship cruise missile; enhances Persian Gulf / Strait of Hormuz maritime denial Operational
Noor / Ghader / Ghadir ASCM 120–300 km Chinese C-802 derivatives; primary anti-ship systems for Persian Gulf operations Operational
Abu Mahdi ASCM/LACM ~1,000 km Naval variant of Soumar/Hoveyzeh family; named after militia leader; displayed with naval paint Assessed
*Soumar range highly disputed. Sources: CSIS Missile Threat; IISS; Iran Watch; War on the Rocks (2019). Ranges are assessed/reported estimates.

Table C: Key Enablers

EnablerDetails
Launch Platforms Primarily road-mobile TELs (6×6, 8×8, 10×10 chassis) for rapid dispersal; hardened underground “missile cities” for storage and assembly; satellite imagery shows expanded complexes near Tehran (Khojir, Modarres) with protective berms and bunkers; post-2025 war — Iran is rebuilding and reinforcing underground missile facilities.
Guidance Trends Systematic improvement over two decades: from basic INS to satellite-aided navigation, maneuverable re-entry vehicles (MaRVs), and possible terrain contour matching for cruise missiles. Emad’s CEP assessed at ~50m; Fateh-110 guidance kit at ~30m or less. Iran prioritised precision over range extension (self-imposed ~2,000 km cap since 2015). Dielectric nose cones on cruise missiles suggest radar-based terminal seekers.
Proliferation Patterns Iran has supplied Fateh-110 variants to Hezbollah (since at least 2006); Qiam-1 and Shahab-3 technology to Houthis; Fateh/Quds cruise missile technology to Iraqi militias and Houthis. Syria received Fateh-110 production capability. Iran also transferred close-range ballistic missiles to Russia. Post-2025, proxy architecture has shifted focus to Yemen and Iraq after Hezbollah degradation.
Sources: CRS Report R44017; DIA 2024 Report; CSIS; Iran Watch; Alma Center (Feb 2026).
“What Iran Can Reach” — Range Bands

Iran’s operational missile envelope covers the entire Middle East and parts of southeastern Europe. SRBMs (up to ~1,000 km) cover the Persian Gulf, all Gulf Cooperation Council states, and US bases in the region. MRBMs (~1,300–2,000 km) bring Israel, Turkey, and southeastern Europe within range. Cruise missiles (Hoveyzeh at 1,350 km; Paveh at 1,650 km) add a low-altitude, radar-evading layer to this coverage. Iran does not currently possess an ICBM — its longest-range deployed missile, the Khorramshahr, reaches approximately 2,000 km, far short of the distance required to strike the US mainland (~10,000+ km). However, its space-launch programme demonstrates propulsion technologies that are theoretically applicable to longer-range systems.

Section 05

Missiles in Israel–Iran Escalations

A timeline of major Iran missile/drone operations since 2017 with lessons for UPSC.

June 2017
Strikes on ISIS in Syria (Deir ez-Zor)
Iran launched 6 ballistic missiles (reportedly Zolfaghar and Qiam-1) from western Iran at ISIS positions in eastern Syria — a distance of ~600 km. Signal: First operational use of long-range missiles; demonstrated strike capability across Iraq/Syria. Lesson: Iran could project force well beyond its borders using missiles alone.
September 2018
Strikes on Kurdish Groups in Iraq (Koya)
Iran launched 7 Fateh-110 missiles at Kurdish opposition headquarters in Koya, Iraq. Signal: Demonstrated precision targeting against specific buildings. Lesson: Iran was willing to use missiles against non-state targets in sovereign third countries.
September 2019
Saudi Aramco Attack (Abqaiq & Khurais)
A coordinated attack using cruise missiles and drones struck Saudi Arabia’s Abqaiq oil processing facility and Khurais oil field. The attack temporarily halted production that accounted for roughly 5–7% of global daily petroleum supply. Although Houthis claimed responsibility, UN investigators traced missile components to Iran, and the attack trajectory suggested a launch from the north (Iraq/Iran), not Yemen. Signal: Iran could cripple critical energy infrastructure with precision cruise missile + drone combinations. Lesson: Cruise missiles flying at low altitude can bypass air-defence systems; mixed drone-missile attacks create saturation; global energy security is vulnerable to regional conflicts.
January 2020
Retaliation for Soleimani — Strikes on Al-Asad Air Base, Iraq
Following the US assassination of IRGC-Quds Force commander Qasem Soleimani, Iran launched up to 22 ballistic missiles (Fateh-313, Qiam-1 variants assessed) at US facilities at Al-Asad Air Base and Erbil, Iraq. Considerable damage to structures was reported; over 100 US service members were later diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries. Signal: Iran could and would directly strike US military facilities; precise enough to hit specific structures. Lesson: Ballistic missiles have demonstrable precision even against hardened military bases; “proportional retaliation” was carefully calibrated to avoid escalation to full war; early warning and dispersal saved lives.
April 2024
Iran’s Direct Attack on Israel (“True Promise I”)
Iran launched a large-scale combined strike directly at Israel using ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and one-way attack drones (Shaheds). Reports indicated 300+ projectiles including ~120 ballistic missiles. A coalition of the US, UK, France, Jordan, and Israel intercepted the vast majority before they reached targets. Signal: First-ever direct Iranian strike on Israeli territory — a major escalation threshold crossed. Lesson: Coalition missile defence can be effective but is expensive and requires multinational coordination; advance warning and time (drones take hours to transit) allowed preparation; ballistic missiles posed the greatest interception challenge due to speed.
June 2025
The “12-Day War” / Operation Rising Lion — Iran-Israel Full Conflict
The most significant missile engagement in the conflict. Over 12 days, Iran reportedly launched approximately 550 medium-range ballistic missiles at Israel. The US expended over 150 THAAD interceptors and ~80 SM-3 interceptors to defend Israel, alongside Israel’s own Arrow, David’s Sling, and Iron Dome systems. Prior Israeli operations had degraded Hezbollah’s second-strike capability and Syrian air defences, enabling direct strikes on Iran. Signal: Saturation missile warfare at scale; Iran’s full conventional deterrent tested. Lesson: Interceptor stocks deplete rapidly under sustained fire; the cost-exchange ratio massively favours the offence; pre-war degradation of proxies (Hezbollah) weakened Iran’s multi-front strategy; post-war, Iran lost an estimated one-third to one-half of its ballistic missile arsenal and about two-thirds of its launchers.
Key Defence Response Lessons (for GS3)

Multi-layered missile defence is essential — no single system suffices. Israel used Arrow-3 (exo-atmospheric), Arrow-2 (upper-atmosphere), David’s Sling (medium range), and Iron Dome (short range).

Coalition interception significantly enhances defence — US, UK, France, and Jordan contributed interceptors and radar coverage in 2024.

Early warning systems (satellites, over-the-horizon radars) provide critical decision time, especially against ballistic missiles with flight times of 10-15 minutes.

The “shoot the archer, not the arrow” doctrine — given unsustainable interceptor costs, militaries increasingly prioritise destroying launchers (TELs) and production facilities rather than intercepting every missile.

Section 06

Missile Defence

High-level concepts — layers, interceptors, sensors, and why missile defence is hard.

Defence Layers

Layered Missile Defence (Conceptual)
Space
Satellites & Exo-atmospheric Interceptors Arrow-3, SM-3 Block IIA, THAAD — engage above the atmosphere
Early-warning satellites detect launch heat plumes
Upper
Atmo
Endo-atmospheric Interceptors Arrow-2, THAAD — engage during re-entry phase
Ground radars (AN/TPY-2, Green Pine) provide tracking
Lower
Atmo
Area Defence Patriot PAC-3, David’s Sling, S-400 — engage closer to target
Covers wider geographic zones; engages cruise missiles too
Near
Surface
Point Defence Iron Dome, CIWS, C-RAM — last-ditch close-in defence
Short-range; protects specific high-value sites
Ground
Target The defended asset — military base, city, or critical infrastructure

Interceptors vs Sensors

Sensors include early-warning satellites (detect launch heat plumes), ground-based radars (AN/TPY-2 for THAAD, Green Pine for Arrow), and Aegis ship-based radars. They detect, track, and provide targeting data to interceptors. Interceptors are the missiles that physically destroy the incoming threat — either by direct hit (“hit-to-kill”) or proximity detonation. The sensor network must seamlessly hand off tracking data as the target moves through each defence layer.

Why Missile Defence Is Hard

Four Challenges

1. Saturation: Large salvos can overwhelm finite interceptor stocks. If a defence requires 2 interceptors per incoming missile (standard doctrine), 500 missiles need 1,000 interceptors.

2. Decoys & countermeasures: Ballistic missiles can deploy decoys, chaff, or manoeuvring warheads (MaRVs) to confuse interceptors.

3. Mixed threats: Simultaneous ballistic (high, fast) + cruise (low, slow) + drone (very slow, numerous) attacks force defenders to engage at multiple altitudes and speeds simultaneously, straining radar discrimination and command sequencing.

4. Cost asymmetry: A single THAAD interceptor costs ~$12-15M; an Iranian Fateh-class missile costs a fraction of that. Sustained defence is financially unsustainable without destroying launchers.

India’s BMD & Air Defence Relevance (GS3)

Policy-Level Discussion

India’s BMD Programme: DRDO has developed a two-tier BMD system — the Prithvi Air Defence (PAD/Pradyumna) for exo-atmospheric interception and the Advanced Air Defence (AAD/Ashwin) for endo-atmospheric interception. India tested its first BMD interceptor in 2006. The system is assessed to provide limited coverage (initially for two cities).

S-400 acquisition: India procured S-400 Triumf from Russia — a multi-layered SAM system capable of engaging aircraft, cruise missiles, and some ballistic missiles at ranges up to 400 km.

Barak-8: Jointly developed with Israel (DRDO + IAI); deployed in Indian Navy (MRSAM) and Indian Air Force. Provides medium-range air defence.

Key policy debate: Should India invest in expensive multi-layered BMD (which may be overwhelmed by Pakistan/China salvos), or focus on credible minimum deterrence through offensive capability (Agni missiles, nuclear submarines)? The Israel-Iran experience suggests both are needed — offence to deter, defence to limit damage if deterrence fails.

Section 07

India Angle — UPSC Relevance

GS2 & GS3: India’s West Asia interests, strategic autonomy, and policy toolkit.

India’s West Asia Interests

Diaspora: ~8-9 million Indians live in the Gulf/West Asia region — the largest overseas concentration. Their remittances (~$35+ billion annually) are vital to India’s forex reserves and domestic economies in states like Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and Telangana. Any regional conflict triggers evacuation concerns (cf. Operation Vande Bharat, Operation Kaveri precedents).

Energy dependence: India imports ~85% of its crude oil needs, with a significant share from West Asia (Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE). Iran was historically a major supplier before US sanctions. Oil price spikes from regional conflict directly impact India’s current account deficit, inflation, and fiscal health.

Trade routes: The Strait of Hormuz carries ~20% of global oil trade; the Bab el-Mandeb/Red Sea route is critical for India-Europe trade. Houthi attacks on shipping in the Red Sea (2023-2026) forced rerouting around the Cape of Good Hope, increasing shipping costs and delivery times.

Strategic Autonomy & Spillover Risks

India has historically maintained strategic autonomy in West Asia — maintaining ties with both Israel and Iran, the Gulf Arab states and Turkey. The current conflict tests this balance. Key spillover risks for India include:

Spillover Risk Matrix

Oil prices: The June 2025 war caused oil price spikes; prolonged conflict threatens sustained high prices → inflation, CAD widening.

Shipping disruption: Houthi missile attacks on Red Sea shipping → insurance costs, rerouting, supply chain delays.

Cyber risks: Escalation in the Middle East has historically been accompanied by increased cyber attacks on critical infrastructure; India’s digital economy is a potential collateral target.

Diaspora safety: Repeated evacuations are costly and logistically complex.

International Law Basics

UN Charter Article 51: Recognises the inherent right of states to individual or collective self-defence against an armed attack. Iran invoked this for its April 2024 strike on Israel; Israel/US invoked it for strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities. The key legal debates involve: (a) whether pre-emptive strikes qualify as self-defence, (b) the proportionality requirement — response must be proportionate to the original attack, and (c) the necessity test — was force the only option?

Sovereignty: Iran’s missile strikes on Iraq and Syria (targeting ISIS/Kurdish groups) raise questions about violating state sovereignty. Proxy missile attacks (Houthis from Yemen at Saudi/Israeli targets) blur the line of state responsibility — when is a state responsible for its proxy’s actions?

India’s Policy Toolkit

Diplomacy: India has engaged with all parties — PM-level visits to both Israel and Gulf states; India’s role in I2U2 (India-Israel-UAE-US) grouping while maintaining dialogue with Iran on Chabahar port. Strategic autonomy demands continued multi-vector engagement.

Evacuation operations: India has one of the world’s most experienced evacuation machineries — Operation Raahat (Yemen 2015), Operation Devi Shakti (Afghanistan 2021), and multiple Gulf evacuations. The Indian Navy’s growing Indian Ocean presence supports these capabilities.

Maritime security: Indian Navy’s deployment in the Arabian Sea and Gulf of Aden (anti-piracy operations) acquires new significance with missile/drone threats to shipping.

Multilateral forums: India can leverage its position in the UN Security Council (when elected), G20 presidency legacy, and SCO/BRICS platforms to advocate de-escalation, energy security cooperation, and protection of shipping lanes.

Section 08

Answer Writing Toolkit

10 probable Mains questions with structured answer frameworks + 2 analytical models.

Analytical Frameworks

Security Triangle

Threat (who/what threatens?) → Capability (what weapons/means exist?) → Intent (what are the strategic objectives?). Use this for any defence/security question. Example: Iran’s missiles (capability) + “Axis of Resistance” doctrine (intent) = regional threat assessment.

PESTLE Analysis

Political · Economic · Security · Tech · Legal · Ethical — cover all dimensions. Example for Iran–Israel: Political (regime vs democracy), Economic (oil/sanctions), Security (missiles/defence), Tech (precision/hypersonic), Legal (Art 51, proportionality), Ethical (civilian harm).

10 Probable Mains Questions

Q1 · GS3 (Security)
“The proliferation of ballistic and cruise missiles has fundamentally altered the character of regional conflicts.” Discuss with reference to West Asia.
  • Intro: The Israel–Iran conflict demonstrates how missile proliferation has shifted the military balance from air-power dominance to missile-centric warfare.
  • Define ballistic vs cruise missiles; how each changes conflict dynamics
  • Iran’s missile buildup as a case study — sanctions → asymmetric response
  • Saturation doctrine and the cost-exchange dilemma (THAAD costs vs missile costs)
  • Proxy proliferation — Houthis, Hezbollah using Iranian-origin missiles
  • Impact on civilian life: energy infrastructure, shipping, displacement
  • Value-add: June 2025 data — 550 MRBMs, $1.5B in interceptors expended
  • Conclusion: Balanced — missiles provide asymmetric deterrence but also lower the threshold for conflict; MTCR and multilateral arms control remain essential.
Q2 · GS2 (IR)
Examine the implications of the Israel–Iran conflict for India’s strategic interests in West Asia.
  • Intro: India’s multi-dimensional interests in West Asia — diaspora, energy, trade routes — face unprecedented stress.
  • Diaspora safety: 8-9 million Indians, remittance economy
  • Energy security: 85% oil import dependency, Hormuz chokepoint
  • Shipping and supply chains: Red Sea disruption, insurance costs
  • Strategic autonomy dilemma: Israel vs Iran balancing act; I2U2 vs Chabahar
  • India’s diplomatic options: multilateral advocacy, bilateral engagement
  • Value-add: Cite Operation Raahat, oil price impact data, Houthi shipping attacks
  • Conclusion: India must pursue proactive diplomacy, diversify energy sources, and strengthen maritime capabilities while maintaining its strategic autonomy tradition.
Q3 · GS3 (Security)
Critically evaluate the effectiveness of multi-layered missile defence systems in light of recent conflicts.
  • Intro: Israel’s defence against Iranian missile salvos provides the most extensive real-world test of layered missile defence.
  • Explain layered defence concept: exo-atmospheric → endo → point defence
  • Successes: Coalition interception in April 2024; Arrow/THAAD performance
  • Limitations: Cost asymmetry, interceptor depletion, saturation risk
  • “Shoot the archer” shift — targeting launchers vs intercepting missiles
  • India’s BMD relevance: PAD/AAD, S-400, Barak-8 acquisitions
  • Value-add: CSIS data on THAAD depletion (~14% of stockpile in 12 days)
  • Conclusion: Missile defence is necessary but not sufficient — must be combined with offensive deterrence, counter-force operations, and diplomatic de-escalation.
Q4 · GS2 (IR)
“Proxy warfare has emerged as the preferred instrument of state-sponsored conflict.” Examine with reference to Iran’s ‘Axis of Resistance.’
  • Intro: Iran’s proxy network represents the most sophisticated state-sponsored asymmetric warfare apparatus in modern times.
  • Define proxy warfare; why states prefer it (deniability, cost, multi-front pressure)
  • Map Iran’s proxy network: Hezbollah, Houthis, Iraqi militias, Hamas
  • Capabilities transferred: missiles, drones, technical knowledge, funding
  • Effectiveness: Houthi Red Sea operations, Hezbollah’s deterrent role
  • Limitations exposed: Israeli degradation of Hezbollah (2024); proxy collapse doesn’t equal state collapse
  • Value-add: UN Panel of Experts findings on Iranian components in Houthi weapons
  • Conclusion: Proxy warfare complicates attribution and international law enforcement but is strategically fragile when proxies are directly targeted.
Q5 · GS3 (Science & Tech)
Differentiate between ballistic and cruise missiles. How has advancement in missile guidance technology changed the nature of warfare?
  • Intro: The evolution from unguided rockets to precision-guided missiles represents one of the most significant military-technological shifts of the modern era.
  • Technical comparison: trajectory, propulsion, speed, altitude, detectability
  • Guidance evolution: INS → GPS-aided → MaRV → TERCOM → terminal seekers
  • Impact of precision: reduced need for nuclear payloads (Iran’s CEP improvements)
  • Dual-use concerns: space launch vehicles and ICBM technology overlap
  • Arms control challenges: MTCR, Hague Code of Conduct, JCPOA missile dimensions
  • Value-add: Iran’s Emad CEP ~50m; Fateh-110 kit at ~30m; January 2020 Al-Asad precision
  • Conclusion: Precision has made conventional missiles strategic weapons — blurring the nuclear/conventional divide and demanding new arms control approaches.
Q6 · GS2 (IR)
Discuss the right to self-defence under international law and its application in the context of the Israel–Iran conflict.
  • Intro: UN Charter Article 51 is the cornerstone of self-defence in international law, yet its interpretation is increasingly contested.
  • Article 51 framework: armed attack trigger, necessity, proportionality, immediacy
  • Iran’s claim: retaliation for Israeli actions = self-defence
  • Israel/US claim: pre-emptive strikes on nuclear/missile facilities = anticipatory self-defence
  • Proxy dimension: state responsibility for proxy attacks (ILC Articles on State Responsibility)
  • Proportionality debate: 550 missiles vs nuclear facility strikes
  • Value-add: ICJ Nicaragua case precedent; Caroline doctrine on pre-emption
  • Conclusion: The conflict exposes the gap between Cold War-era legal frameworks and 21st-century hybrid warfare realities — reform of the international legal architecture is overdue.
Q7 · GS3 (Security)
How does the Israel–Iran missile exchange highlight the vulnerability of global energy supply chains? Suggest measures for India.
  • Intro: The 2019 Abqaiq attack and the 2024-2026 escalations demonstrate that precision missiles can paralyse critical energy infrastructure.
  • Hormuz chokepoint: 20% of global oil; Bab el-Mandeb: India-Europe trade
  • Price shock transmission: oil spike → inflation → CAD → fiscal pressure
  • Shipping rerouting costs (Red Sea → Cape of Good Hope)
  • India’s measures: Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), energy diversification, renewables push
  • Maritime security: Navy deployments, convoy protection
  • Value-add: Abqaiq halted 5-7% of global supply; India’s SPR capacity of ~40 days
  • Conclusion: Energy security requires both supply diversification and transition acceleration — the Iran conflict strengthens the case for India’s green energy mission.
Q8 · GS3 (Security)
What lessons does the Israel–Iran conflict hold for India’s Ballistic Missile Defence programme?
  • Intro: The most intensive missile-vs-defence combat in history provides empirical lessons for India’s own BMD development.
  • Layered defence necessity: single-tier systems are insufficient
  • Interceptor arithmetic: stocks deplete fast; production must scale
  • Multi-threat environment: ballistic + cruise + drone requires different interceptors
  • India’s current capabilities: PAD/AAD, S-400, Barak-8 — gaps analysis
  • Industrial base: India needs indigenous interceptor production at scale
  • Value-add: US THAAD depletion data; India’s two-city BMD coverage vs China/Pakistan multi-vector threat
  • Conclusion: India must pursue an integrated air and missile defence command with accelerated indigenous production and interoperable coalition frameworks.
Q9 · GS2 (IR)
Examine the role of the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) in preventing missile proliferation. Has it been effective?
  • Intro: The MTCR (est. 1987) is the primary multilateral framework for missile nonproliferation, yet Iran’s arsenal was built largely despite it.
  • MTCR objectives, membership (35 countries), guidelines (Category I/II)
  • Successes: delayed several countries’ missile programmes; India’s 2016 admission
  • Limitations: non-binding, non-membership (Iran, North Korea, Pakistan), technology leakage
  • Iran case: North Korean, Chinese, and Russian technology transfer enabled Iran’s programme
  • Reform proposals: expand to drones/UAVs, strengthen enforcement
  • Value-add: Iran’s Shahab-3 based on NK Nodong; Soumar from Kh-55 obtained via Ukraine
  • Conclusion: The MTCR remains relevant but needs updating — drone proliferation, space-missile overlaps, and proxy transfers represent 21st-century gaps.
Q10 · GS4 (Ethics) / GS3
“The use of missiles against civilian infrastructure raises fundamental ethical questions about modern warfare.” Discuss.
  • Intro: The ethical dimension of missile warfare intersects with international humanitarian law (IHL), proportionality, and the principle of distinction.
  • IHL principles: distinction (combatant vs civilian), proportionality, precaution
  • Civilian harm: energy infrastructure strikes affect entire populations (Abqaiq, power grids)
  • Dual-use targeting dilemma: is an oil refinery a military target?
  • Autonomous weapons dimension: AI-guided munitions and accountability gaps
  • India’s doctrinal position: credible minimum deterrence + no-first-use (nuclear level)
  • Value-add: Geneva Conventions, Additional Protocol I provisions; ICJ Advisory Opinion on Nuclear Weapons
  • Conclusion: Technology has outpaced legal/ethical frameworks — renewed international consensus on civilian protection in the missile age is imperative.
Section 09

PYQ Mapping — Heat Map

Indicative mapping of UPSC’s question frequency in related topic areas. Label: indicative — based on observable PYQ trends, not exact counts.

Topic Bucket Prelims Trend GS2 Trend GS3 Trend Likely Focus 2026
Missile Technology & Deterrence Medium Low HIGH BMD, missile types, hypersonic, cost-exchange
West Asia Crisis & India’s Interests Low HIGH Medium Diaspora, strategic autonomy, I2U2, Chabahar
International Law / Use of Force Low HIGH Low Art 51, proportionality, proxy accountability
Energy Security & Geopolitics Medium Medium HIGH Oil dependency, SLOCs, SPR, green transition
Nuclear Proliferation / JCPOA Medium HIGH Low JCPOA collapse, NPT, MTCR, Iran’s breakout
Proxy Warfare / Non-state Actors Low HIGH Medium Houthis, Hezbollah, state responsibility
India’s Defence Modernisation HIGH Low HIGH Agni, BrahMos, S-400, indigenous BMD, DRDO
Note: This is an indicative mapping based on observable UPSC PYQ trends (2015-2025). Actual question appearance may vary. Use as a prioritisation guide.
Section 10

Value Addition Boxes

Keywords, common mistakes, and the ethics angle.

🔑 Keywords to Sprinkle in Answers

A2/AD CEP Deterrence by Punishment Escalation Ladder SLOCs Saturation Attack Cost-Exchange Ratio MaRV TEL Missile Cities Article 51 Proportionality MTCR Credible Minimum Deterrence Strategic Autonomy JCPOA Axis of Resistance Shoot the Archer Hypersonic Defence Industrial Base

⚠️ Common Mistakes in Answers

1. Confusing ballistic (arching trajectory, unpowered mid-flight) with cruise (low, sustained flight with engine). Many aspirants mix these.

2. Treating all missiles as “nuclear delivery systems” — most of Iran’s arsenal is conventionally armed; the precision revolution makes conventional missiles strategically significant.

3. Ignoring the cost dimension — missile defence effectiveness cannot be assessed without discussing the financial sustainability of interceptor use.

4. One-sided analysis — either “Iran is the aggressor” or “Iran is the victim.” UPSC expects balanced analysis that acknowledges Iran’s security motivations while noting the destabilising effects of proliferation.

5. Forgetting the India angle in GS2/GS3 answers on West Asia. Always link back to India’s interests: diaspora, energy, maritime security, strategic autonomy.

6. Treating missile defence as binary — “it works” or “it fails.” The reality is probabilistic; defence reduces damage but cannot guarantee complete protection, especially against saturation.

⚖️ Ethics Angle (GS4 Link)

Civilian harm: Missile strikes on energy infrastructure (oil refineries, power plants) have cascading effects on entire civilian populations — electricity, water, hospitals. The 2019 Abqaiq attack and the 2025 war’s infrastructure strikes raise questions about the IHL principle of distinction between military and civilian objects.

Proportionality: Is launching 550 ballistic missiles — knowing some will hit civilian areas — proportionate retaliation? The ethical calculus of collateral damage in missile warfare is unresolved.

Arms trade ethics: Should states supply missiles to proxy groups operating outside their borders? The Iranian transfer of missile technology to Houthis — who then disrupt international shipping — creates ethical and legal accountability chains that current frameworks struggle to address.

Section 11

Frequently Asked Questions

Collapsible FAQs for quick revision.

What is the difference between ballistic and cruise missiles?
A ballistic missile follows a high arching trajectory — it is powered during the boost phase, then coasts unpowered in a ballistic arc before re-entering the atmosphere and striking its target. It reaches very high altitudes and speeds (often hypersonic during re-entry). A cruise missile flies at relatively constant low altitude using aerodynamic lift (wings) and a sustained engine (turbojet/turbofan). It hugs terrain to evade radar. Key difference: ballistic missiles are faster but easier to detect (high trajectory); cruise missiles are slower but harder to detect (low flight profile). Iran uses both for complementary purposes — ballistic for speed and shock, cruise for stealth and precision.
What makes a missile “precision”?
Precision is measured by CEP (Circular Error Probable) — the radius within which 50% of missiles are expected to land. A lower CEP means higher precision. Precision is achieved through advanced guidance: INS (inertial navigation for midcourse), satellite navigation (GPS/GLONASS/BeiDou for correction), terrain matching (comparing terrain below with stored maps), and terminal seekers (radar, infrared, or camera for final approach). Iran has progressively improved precision — from early Shahab-series missiles with CEP of several kilometres to Emad (~50m) and Fateh-110 with guidance kits (~30m).
Why does Iran rely so heavily on missiles?
Four reasons: (1) Sanctions-induced air force gap — Iran has been unable to acquire modern combat aircraft since 1979, leaving its air force with ageing 1970s-80s aircraft. Missiles substitute for air power. (2) Deterrence — unable to match US/Israeli conventional superiority, Iran uses missiles to threaten devastating retaliation. (3) Iran-Iraq War trauma — Iraq’s “War of the Cities” missile attacks created an existential imperative for indigenous strike capability. (4) Regional power projection — missiles allow Iran to hold at risk targets across the entire Middle East without needing expeditionary forces.
Can missile defence stop everything?
No. Missile defence is probabilistic, not absolute. Even the most advanced multi-layered systems face limitations: (1) Saturation — large salvos can overwhelm interceptor stocks; (2) Cost asymmetry — interceptors cost far more than the missiles they destroy; (3) Countermeasures — decoys, MaRVs, and chaff can confuse interceptors; (4) Mixed threats — simultaneous ballistic, cruise, and drone attacks stress different parts of the defence simultaneously. The June 2025 war showed that even with the world’s most advanced defences, the US depleted ~14% of its THAAD interceptor stockpile in 12 days. Defence must be combined with offensive deterrence and diplomatic de-escalation.
What are India’s key concerns from the Iran–Israel conflict?
India’s concerns span multiple dimensions: (1) Diaspora safety — 8-9 million Indians in the Gulf region; (2) Energy security — India imports ~85% of oil, heavily from West Asia; oil price spikes impact inflation and CAD; (3) Shipping routes — Strait of Hormuz and Red Sea disruptions raise freight costs; (4) Strategic autonomy — balancing relations with Israel (defence partner), Iran (Chabahar, historical ties), and Gulf Arab states (energy, diaspora); (5) Defence lessons — implications for India’s own BMD programme, missile procurement, and air defence architecture.
What is A2/AD and why is it important?
Anti-Access/Area Denial (A2/AD) is a military strategy that uses a combination of missiles, air defences, mines, cyber capabilities, and other tools to deny an adversary freedom of operation within a geographic area. Iran’s missile arsenal is a classic A2/AD tool — its SRBMs and MRBMs threaten every military base, port, and airfield within ~2,000 km, forcing adversaries (US, Israel) to operate from further away, invest heavily in missile defence, or accept the risk of attrition. A2/AD is also central to China’s strategy in the Western Pacific (using DF-21D/DF-26 anti-ship ballistic missiles).
What is the MTCR and is it effective?
The Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR), established in 1987, is a voluntary multilateral export control arrangement of 35 countries that aims to limit the proliferation of missiles and missile technology capable of carrying WMDs. It classifies items into Category I (complete missiles, major subsystems for missiles with >300 km range and >500 kg payload — strong presumption of denial) and Category II (other missile-related items). Effectiveness is mixed: the MTCR has slowed some programs and built export-control norms, but key proliferators (Iran, North Korea, Pakistan) are not members. Iran built its arsenal through transfers from North Korea (Shahab-3), China, and Russia/Ukraine (Kh-55 for Soumar) — all bypassing MTCR controls. India joined the MTCR in 2016.
What is the difference between SRBM, MRBM, IRBM, and ICBM?
These are range-based classifications: SRBM (Short-Range Ballistic Missile): <1,000 km — tactical, theatre-level. MRBM (Medium-Range): 1,000–3,000 km — regional deterrence. IRBM (Intermediate-Range): 3,000–5,500 km — continental. ICBM (Intercontinental): >5,500 km — strategic, can reach across continents. Iran’s arsenal is concentrated in the SRBM and MRBM bands (up to ~2,000 km); it does not possess IRBMs or ICBMs, though its space-launch technology has theoretical applicability.
What was unique about the September 2019 Abqaiq attack?
The Abqaiq-Khurais attack was significant for several reasons: (1) It demonstrated that precision cruise missiles and drones could strike critical energy infrastructure with devastating accuracy; (2) It temporarily halted processing of roughly 5–7% of global daily petroleum supply; (3) Saudi Arabia’s expensive US-supplied air defence systems failed to detect or intercept the low-flying cruise missiles and drones; (4) While Houthis claimed responsibility, UN investigators found the attack could not have been launched from Yemen and traced components to Iran — highlighting the attribution challenge in proxy warfare; (5) It exposed the vulnerability of the global oil supply chain to relatively cheap, precision weapons.
What is a TEL and why does it matter?
A TEL (Transporter-Erector-Launcher) is a mobile vehicle (typically a heavy truck) that carries a missile, raises it to launch position, and fires it. TELs are central to Iran’s missile doctrine because they provide survivability — unlike fixed silos, TELs can disperse across the country, relocate after launch, and hide in Iran’s underground “missile cities.” This makes pre-emptive strikes against Iran’s missile force extremely difficult — an adversary must find and destroy hundreds of mobile launchers across a country of 1.6 million sq km. The June 2025 Israeli/US strikes reportedly destroyed about two-thirds of Iran’s TEL fleet, but Iran is actively rebuilding.
How does the “hypersonic” label apply to Iran’s Fattah-1?
Iran claims the Fattah-1 is a “hypersonic” missile, but Western analysts assess this claim with scepticism. All ballistic missiles are technically hypersonic during re-entry (exceeding Mach 5). What distinguishes true hypersonic weapons — like Russia’s Avangard (HGV) or scramjet-powered HCMs — is the ability to maneuver at sustained hypersonic speeds within the atmosphere. The Fattah-1 appears to be a ballistic missile with a MaRV (maneuverable re-entry vehicle) that has an additional solid rocket motor — it can manoeuvre during terminal phase but is not a glide vehicle or cruise missile in the conventional hypersonic sense. It is a real capability advance (harder to intercept than a standard ballistic warhead) but should be understood accurately.
What is India’s nuclear missile triad?
India maintains a nuclear triad — the ability to deliver nuclear weapons from land, air, and sea: (1) Land-based: Agni series (Agni-I through Agni-V, with ranges from 700 km to 5,000+ km), Prithvi; (2) Air-based: Nuclear-capable aircraft (Mirage 2000, Su-30MKI with Brahmos); (3) Sea-based: INS Arihant-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) armed with K-15 Sagarika and K-4 SLBMs. The triad ensures second-strike capability — even if one leg is destroyed, the others can retaliate, underpinning India’s credible minimum deterrence and no-first-use doctrine.
Section 12

Prelims Quick Sheet

One-page rapid revision for Prelims — bullets only.

🚀 Missile Fundamentals

Missile = rocket + guidance + warhead
Ballistic: high arc, powered then unpowered
Cruise: low flight, sustained engine, terrain-hugging
SRBM < 1,000 km; MRBM 1,000–3,000 km
IRBM 3,000–5,500 km; ICBM > 5,500 km
CEP = accuracy measure (lower = better)
MaRV = Maneuverable Re-entry Vehicle
HGV = Hypersonic Glide Vehicle (boost-glide)
HCM = Hypersonic Cruise Missile (scramjet)
TEL = Transporter-Erector-Launcher (mobile)

🇮🇷 Iran’s Arsenal — Key Facts

Largest missile arsenal in the Middle East
Max operational range: ~2,000 km (Khorramshahr/Sejjil)
Self-imposed range cap of 2,000 km (since 2015)
No ICBM capability currently
Fattah-1: claimed “hypersonic” — MaRV, not true HGV
Solid-fuel trend: Fateh, Sejjil, Kheibar Shekan
Cruise: Soumar family (Hoveyzeh ~1,350 km, Paveh ~1,650 km)
IRGC Aerospace Force controls missile programme
Pre-2025 war: ~2,500 ballistic missiles estimated
Post-2025: lost ~1/3 to 1/2 of arsenal; rebuilding

🇮🇳 India Angle — Must Remember

8-9 million Indians in Gulf/West Asia
India imports ~85% of crude oil
Strait of Hormuz: 20% of global oil trade
India joined MTCR in 2016
India’s BMD: PAD (exo) + AAD (endo-atmospheric)
S-400 acquired from Russia
Barak-8 (India-Israel joint; MRSAM)
Agni-V: India’s longest range (~5,000+ km)
INS Arihant: India’s sea-based nuclear deterrent
Chabahar port: India’s Iran connectivity project

📋 Key Acronyms for Prelims

MTCR — Missile Technology Control Regime
JCPOA — Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action
THAAD — Terminal High Altitude Area Defense
IRGC — Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
A2/AD — Anti-Access / Area Denial
INS — Inertial Navigation System
SLOC — Sea Lines of Communication
IHL — International Humanitarian Law
NPT — Non-Proliferation Treaty
DRDO — Defence R&D Organisation

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