ISLAMABAD, 23 March 2007 — Pakistan successfully test-fired yesterday a nuclear-capable cruise missile with the capability to avoid radar detection, the military said.
The missile, named Babur or Hatf VII, has a range of 700 km and is capable of carrying various types of warheads, including nuclear, the military-run Inter-Services Public Relations Directorate said. The missile’s previous range was 500 km.
“The test was successful and technical parameters were set,” Pakistan military spokesman Maj. Gen. Waheed Arshad said.
The statement said the “Babur... is a terrain-hugging, radar-avoiding cruise missile, whose range has now been enhanced to 700 kilometers. It is a highly maneuverable missile with pinpoint accuracy.”
The test was witnessed by the chairman of Pakistan’s Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, Gen. Ehsan-ul-Haq, as well as senior military officials and scientists, the statement said.
Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz have congratulated the scientists and engineers on this “very important success,” it added.
“The test is part of Pakistan’s ongoing efforts at consolidating its strategic capability and strengthening national security,” the statement said.
The indigenously-developed cruise missile was first tested in 2005, surprising the world, and again in March last year.
Pakistan did not say if it had informed nuclear-armed rival India about the test in advance. They have an agreement to notify each other about tests of ballistic missiles but not cruise missiles.
In February Pakistan signed a historic deal with India to cut the risk of atomic weapons accidents.
The neighbors have routinely conducted missile tests since carrying out tit-for-tat nuclear detonations in May 1998.
However in 2004 they launched a slow-moving peace process aimed at ending six decades of hostility and resolving their dispute over the Himalayan territory of Kashmir, the cause of two of their three wars.