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    NIRBHAY CRUISE MISSILE

    Nirbhay class long-range cruise missiles to be part in all three defence forces' arsenal

    "The government is considering a proposal of a service to induct Nirbhay class cruise missiles. The consideration is at an advanced stage and once cleared, it will mean that all three forces will have the capability to use subsonic cruise missiles to strike targets," defence sources told ANI.

    Nirbhay missiles to be part of India's all three defence forces; can strike targets 1,000 KM away

    In a significant boost to the firepower, all three defence forces will now have long-range cruise missiles of the Nirbhay class. These long-range cruise missiles can strike targets at ranges of over 1,000 KM. DRDO is developing the Nirbhay class long-ra...

    Rudram missile will give Air Force capability to detect and attack enemy radars: DRDO

    "It (Rudram-I) is basically anti-radiation missile launched from an aircraft and when you release it, it will be able to detect any emitting elements and then you will be able to lock on to that emitting element and then it will be able to go on to act on them," DRDO chairman Dr G Satheesh Reddy told ANI.

    Nirbhay subsonic cruise missile develops technical snag during test firing in Odisha

    The missile was test-fired by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) from an integrated test range in Balasore in Odisha at around 10:30 AM. "Minutes later, the missile developed a technical snag following which the trial process was aborted. The DRDO is analysing all the details," said a source.

    Nuclear-capable Nirbhay cruise missile's test fails for the fourth time

    While the missile's first test in March 2013 had completely failed, the second one was dubbed "a partial success" in October 2014.

    From missiles to drones, DRDO projects keep missing deadlines

    The much-touted 'Nirbhay' cruise missile, designed to carry nuclear warheads with a strike range of 1,000km, for instance, is already three years overdue and still far from induction.

    The Economic Times
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