New
Delhi: Just days
after India successfully test fired its first Inter Continental Ballistic
Missile (ICBM), Agni-V, Pakistan has said that it plans to conduct a long-range
missile test.
The neighbour has informed India that it plans to conduct a
long-range missile test in the Indian Ocean over the next five days.
Islamabad has asked New Delhi to issue a notice to all commercial
airlines to steer clear of the area.
The move
by Pakistan comes just five days after India test fired Agni-V to join the
elite club of ICBM nations.
Agni-V, the ICBM test fired by India five days ago, is capable of
carrying nuclear warheads and will be crucial for India's defence against
China. The missile can carry a pay-load of 1 tonne, is 17 m long, 2 m wide and
weighs 50 tonnes. After the missile is inducted into India's strategic forces
by 2014-2015, India will acquire a strong deterrent capacity against China.
Agni-V can cover entire China, Eastern Europe, North Eastern and
Eastern Africa and even Australia if fired from the Nicobar Islands.
Only the permanent members of the UN Security Council - China,
Russia, France, the United States and the United Kingdom - have such long
distance missiles. Israel, too, is believed to posses ICBMs although there is
no official confirmation of the same.
The missile has a range of 5,000 kilometres, a marked improvement
over India's current missiles which can hit potential enemy targets over a
distance of just 3,500 kilometres.