Indian Nuclear Weapon Secrets: Information about India’s nuclear weapons has been leaked. This has been revealed by America. American nuclear scientists claim that India has submarine-based nuclear missiles that remain hidden in the sea. Also, India has retired its old naval nuclear missile capability.
According to the Eurasian Times report, pictures of yoga on Indian Navy warships indicate a shift in nuclear stance. As India moves closer to the maritime phase of its nuclear deterrence by acquiring the capability of submarine-launched nuclear-tipped missiles, it has quietly retired its oldest naval nuclear-capable missiles.
In fact, India has recently progressed rapidly on nuclear powered submarines. To achieve its nuclear deterrence capability in water, India has equipped its two offshore patrol vessels with the capability to launch Dhanush nuclear missile.
How did America know?
According to the FAS analysis’ conclusion, “Clarity came through a strange medium: a series of Instagram posts related to India’s yoga during a port visit to Seychelles in October 2022 showed that the ship with the new deck markings was in fact INS Suvarna. This means that by December 2021, the missile stabilizers on INS Suvarna had been removed, meaning that the ship has been unable to launch nuclear-capable Dhanush ballistic missiles since then.”
Deblina Ghoshal, an Indian scholar on nuclear missiles, missile defence and author of ‘The Role of Ballistic and Cruise Missiles in International Security’, told the Eurasian Times, “It was bound to happen. Dhanush, the naval version of Prithvi, was a technology demonstrator. India is moving towards long-range submarine-launched nuclear-capable missiles. Longer range means the submarines don’t need to be close to enemy targets.”
Conclusions drawn from photographs
Analysis by the Federation of American Scientists showed that these two ships were different from India’s four other Sukanya class patrol vessels, which could be seen through satellite images taken in April 2018. Since then, the aft deck has been repainted with a new cross pattern with a circle. It will probably be used as a helipad.
This conclusion was drawn after analysing social media posts and satellite imagery in recent years. Without nuclear-powered ballistic submarines (SSBNs) and submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), India’s naval nuclear deterrent consisted of two offshore patrol vessels configured to launch nuclear-capable Dhanush missiles.
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