India’s Anti-Satellite Missile Test ‘Stark Message’ to China, Pakistan – Report

India's Anti-Satellite Missile Test ‘Stark Message’ to China, Pakistan – Report

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in a national address on Wednesday that India had “established itself as a space power” by launching a domestically designed ballistic missile interceptor up 300 kilometres (190 miles) to destroy a satellite orbiting the Earth.

New Delhi successfully conducting an anti-satellite missile test sends “a stark message to India’s nuclear-armed rivals China and Pakistan”, the Times of India (TOI) reports.

According to the newspaper, the test “changes Asia’s strategic calculus by proving India has the ability to knock out enemy satellites”.

TOI also cited retired Indian Air Force (IAF) captain Ajey Lele as saying that by launching an anti-satellite missile, India sends a message to all of its adversaries that it is a “strong and capable military power” and that “if somebody wants to do something to our satellites, we have the capability to do this to your satellites”.

John Blaxland, head of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at Australian National University was quoted by TOI as claiming that India’s anti-satellite test indicates that the country’s neighbours “will have to think twice before upping the ante in any future space clash, particularly once this capability matures”.

On Wednesday, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in a national address that India had achieved a “historic feat” by shooting down its own low-orbit satellite with a ground-to-space missile in a three-minute test launch.

He stressed that the test suggests that India is emerging as the fourth entrant into a group of three nations, including Russia, the United States, and China which possess similar satellite destroying capabilities.

The test comes against the background of simmering tensions between New Delhi and Islamabad which escalated late last month when the two countries’ warplanes engaged in a dogfight which was preceded by an IAF airstrike on an alleged terrorist camp in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir region.

The raid took place in response to the 14 February terrorist attack on an Indian military convoy which left at least 40 security personnel dead.

Separately, the India-China ties, which have been tarnished by a spate of simmering border disputes, have deteriorated further as the two countries try to increase their regional clout.

Beijing’s ever-growing military and economic ties with Islamabad has prompted New Delhi to improve its relations with Washington.

Sourse: sputniknews.com

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