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TIME FOR A ROBUST BMD SHIELD

Geopolitics

|

June 2024

With nuclear-armed Pakistan and China in the neighbourhood, India must prepare ballistic missile defences at the earliest for protecting its densely populated cities

TIME FOR A ROBUST BMD SHIELD

The Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) system is a long-range, land-based theatre defence weapon that acts as the upper tier of a basic two-tiered defence against ballistic missiles. It is designed to intercept and destroy short, medium and intermediate-range ballistic missiles during late mid-course or final stage flight– or terminal phase– at altitudes of up to 200 km. This allows it to provide broad area coverage against threats to critical assets such as population centres and industrial resources as well as military forces.

The ability to intercept both inside and outside the atmosphere makes THAAD an important part of layered missile defence concepts, as it falls between the exclusively exo-atmospheric and exclusively endoatmospheric interceptors. This capability makes THAAD different from the Patriot PAC-3 or the future MEADS system, which are point defence options with limited range that are designed to hit a missile just before impact.

There are four main components to THAAD: the launcher, interceptors, radar and fire control. The launcher is mounted on a truck for mobility and storability. There are eight interceptors per launcher. Current configurations of THAAD batteries include six launchers and 48 interceptors, though certain reports indicate that this could be scaled up to nine launchers and 72 interceptors.

The THAAD system utilises the Army Navy/Transportable Radar Surveillance (AN/TPY-2) radar to detect and track enemy missiles at a range of up to 1,000 km. The fire control system is the communication and data-management backbone and is equipped with an indigenous THAAD Fire Control and Communications system. The Command, Control, Battle Management and Communications (C2BMC) also provides tracking and cueing information for THAAD from other regional sensors on Aegis and Patriot systems.

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JOINTNESS TO REDEFINE MARITIME AIR POWER

The buzzword in New Delhi is multidomain warfare, which involves a high level of jointness between the three services. As mentioned in the last issue of Geopolitics (November 2025), jointness takes time and requires a large investment by the government in weapons systems, sensors, and training. But sensible and easy steps can be taken, especially in the maritime sphere, to integrate the Coast Guard, Air Force, and Navy into a potent force to safeguard the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal, argues AMIT GUPTA

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THERMAL IMAGING AND BALLISTIC PROTECTION DRIVE SOLDIER MODERNISATION

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INDIA'S NEW HIGH-ALTITUDE PIVOT NEAR THE CHINA BORDER

Just kilometres from the LAC, India has activated one of the world's highest military airfields, a dramatic shift in Ladakh's strategic landscape. The Mudh-Nyoma airbase, now fully operational, signals faster mobility, sharper surveillance and a renewed posture along a frontier where infrastructure has become the new currency of power.

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THE MARITIME MAKEOVER

JOSEPH P CHACKO analyses the transforming role of the Indian Navy as an indigenous force multiplier, a modern blue-water fleet, and a crucial instrument in shaping India's emergence as an integral Indo-Pacific power

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GUARDING THE RIM

India's post-26/11 coastal security system boasts radars, patrol boats and new laws - yet beneath the optics lie old weaknesses. Training gaps, stranded infrastructure, jurisdictional clutter and climate stress continue to erode readiness.VISHAL DUGGAL reports

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SAGAR DEFENCE INAUGURATES PUNE FACILITY

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COCHIN SHIPYARD: THE COUNTRY'S SOLE AIRCRAFT CARRIER BUILDER

India is getting ready to add another aircraft carrier that will be nuclear-powered to its fleet, joining INS Vikramaditya and INS Vikrant. SUBHANGI PALVE takes a look at the only shipyard in the country to have built one.

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ICEYE'S BLUEPRINT FOR THE NEXT FRONTIER

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A report that calls for action

The Parliamentary Standing Committee on External Affairs has concluded that India’s current Indian Ocean strategy is fragmented, under-resourced, and insufficiently coordinated to meet accelerating geopolitical, security, and environmental challenges, especially China's expanding presence.

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SHOW STOPPER

The 19th edition of the Dubai Airshow recorded deals worth a historic USD 202 billion, but was marred by the unfortunate fatal crash of an IAF Tejas fighter jet. ATUL CHANDRA reports

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