In today’s world, technological backwardness leads to
subjugation. Can we allow our freedom to be compromised
on this account? It is our bounden duty to guarantee the
security and integrity of our nation against this threat.
Should we not uphold the mandate bequeathed to us by our
forefathers who fought for the liberation of our country from
imperialism? Only when we are technologically self-reliant
will we able to fulfill their dream.
Till the Agni launch, the Indian Armed Forces had been
structured for a strictly defensive role to safeguard our
nation, to shield our democratic processes from the
turbulence in the countries around us and to raise the cost
of any external intervention to an unacceptable level for
countries which may entertain such notions. With Agni,
India had reached the stage where she had the option of
preventing wars involving her.
Agni marked the completion of five years of IGMDP.
Now that it had demonstrated our competence in the crucial
area of re-entry technology and with tactical missiles like
Prithvi and Trishul already testfired, the launches of Nag
and Akash would take us into areas of competence where
there is little or no international competition. These two
missile systems contained within themselves the stuff of
major technological breakthroughs. There was a need to
focus our efforts more intensively on them.
In September 1989, I was invited by the Maharashtra
Academy of Sciences in Bombay to deliver the Jawaharlal
Nehru Memorial Lecture. I used this opportunity to share
with the budding scientists my plans of making an
indigenous Air-to-Air missile, Astra. It would dovetail with
the development of the Indian Light Combat Aircraft (LCA).
I told them that our work in Imaging Infra Red (IIR) and
Millimetric Wave (MMW) radar technology for the Nag
missile system had placed us in the vanguard of
international R&D efforts in missile technology. I also drew
their attention to the crucial role that carbon-carbon and
other advanced composite materials play in mastering the
re-entry technology. Agni was the conclusion of a
technological effort that was given its start by Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi when the country decided to break
free from the paralysing fetters of technological
backwardness and slough off the dead skin of
subordination to industrialized nations.
The second flight of Prithvi at the end of September
1988 was again a great success. Prithvi has proved to be
the best surface-to-surface missile in the world today. It can
carry 1000 kg of warhead to a distance of 250 km and
deliver it within a radius of 50 metres. Through computer
controlled operations, numerous warhead weight and
delivery distance combinations can be achieved in a very
short time and in battlefield conditions. It is a hundred per
cent indigenous in all respects—design, operations,
deployment. It can be produced in large numbers as the
production facilities at BDL were concurrently developed
during the development phase itself. The Army was quick to
recognize the potential of this commendable effort and
approached the CCPA for placing orders for Prithvi and
Trishul missile systems, something that had never
happened before.
* * * WINGS OF FIRE ORIENTATION - 1