BrahMos Missile
Summary
At the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, India’s Defence Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh confirmed that India has signed a deal with Vietnam to export the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile and negotiations are in the final stages with Indonesia. The Vietnam agreement is estimated to be worth around ₹5,800 crore and is expected to include coastal defence missile systems, an initial stock of missiles, training assistance and logistical support. BrahMos is a long-range, universal supersonic cruise missile — launchable from land, sea, sub-sea, and air — built by BrahMos Aerospace, a 1998 joint venture between India’s DRDO and Russia’s NPO Mashinostroyeniya (NPOM).
Key takeaways:
- Vietnam deal signed (₹5,800 crore) — confirmed at Shangri-La, though a formal public announcement is still awaited; Indonesia is next in line.
- Philippines was the first foreign buyer — a USD 375 million contract in 2022, with deliveries already begun; first batch delivered 2024, second in April 2025.
- Operation Sindoor showcase — the missile’s combat performance in the 2025 India–Pakistan exchange boosted its export appeal.
- ASEAN / Indo-Pacific strategic play — exports target nations with South China Sea disputes with China (Vietnam, Indonesia, Philippines), deepening India’s regional defence footprint.
- “Fire and Forget” supersonic missile (~Mach 2.8) — hard for modern air defences to intercept due to sustained supersonic speed and sea-skimming flight.
- Wider interest from Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, Thailand, South Africa, Qatar, Oman, Brazil, and the UAE.
Background & Concept
What is BrahMos? A state-of-the-art, two-stage, universal supersonic cruise missile developed by BrahMos Aerospace, an Indo-Russian joint venture set up in 1998. The name fuses two rivers — Brahmaputra (India) and Moskva (Russia). It is derived from the Russian P-800 Oniks/Yakhont anti-ship missile family.
It operates on a “Fire and Forget” principle — once launched, it needs no further guidance from the operator — and maintains supersonic speed throughout its flight (unlike subsonic cruise missiles like the Tomahawk). Combined with a sea-skimming terminal approach as low as 5 metres, this gives air-defence systems very little reaction time, making interception extremely difficult.
It is a “universal” missile because a common core can be configured for land, ship, submarine, and air launch platforms.
Missile Profile
| Indicator | Detail |
|---|---|
| Name origin | Brahmaputra (India) + Moskva (Russia) |
| Joint venture | BrahMos Aerospace (1998), DRDO + NPO Mashinostroyeniya (NPOM) |
| JV ownership | India 50.5% : Russia 49.5% |
| Type | Universal, long-range supersonic cruise missile |
| Operating principle | Fire and Forget |
| Speed | About Mach 2.8 (~3 times the speed of sound) |
| Range | ~290 km (base/export variant); extended versions up to ~400–800 km after India joined MTCR (2016) |
| Warhead | Conventional, 200–300 kg |
| Cruise altitude | Up to 15 km; as low as 5 m (sea-skimming) |
| Propulsion | Two-stage: solid-propellant booster + liquid-fuelled ramjet sustainer |
| Launch system | Transport Launch Canister (TLC) |
| Guidance | Inertial Navigation System (INS) + satellite (GPS/GLONASS/NavIC) + active radar terminal seeker |
Key Features
- Supersonic throughout flight — sustains ~Mach 2.8 from launch to impact, unlike subsonic cruise missiles, giving higher kinetic energy and far less interception window.
- Fire and Forget — autonomous post-launch; no operator guidance needed.
- Universal platform compatibility — land, ship, submarine, and air-launched variants.
- Low radar signature & sea-skimming — terminal dive as low as 5 m makes detection late and interception hard.
- High precision & lethality — pinpoint accuracy with a kinetic + conventional warhead capable of penetrating hardened/ship targets.
- Two-stage propulsion — a solid booster accelerates it to supersonic speed, then a liquid ramjet sustains cruise.
Variants
- BrahMos (land/ship/sub) — the operational baseline across the Indian Army, Navy, and shore batteries.
- BrahMos-A (air-launched) — fired from the Su-30MKI, India’s first air-launched supersonic cruise capability.
- BrahMos-ER (Extended Range) — longer-reach version enabled after India’s MTCR membership (2016).
- BrahMos-NG (Next Generation) — lighter, smaller, stealthier; intended for wider platform integration, including more fighters.
- BrahMos-II (hypersonic) — under development, targeting hypersonic (Mach 5+) speeds.
About the Key Players
BrahMos Aerospace — Indo-Russian JV (1998) that designs, develops, and manufactures the missile; India (DRDO) holds 50.5% and Russia (NPOM) 49.5%. A new production and integration facility in Lucknow (Uttar Pradesh Defence Industrial Corridor) was inaugurated in 2025.
DRDO (Defence Research and Development Organisation) — India’s premier military R&D agency under the Ministry of Defence; the Indian partner in the JV.
NPO Mashinostroyeniya (NPOM) — Russian rocket/missile design house; the Russian partner, source of the underlying Oniks/Yakhont technology.
Keywords & Definitions
▸ BrahMos: Indo-Russian two-stage supersonic cruise missile (Brahmaputra + Moskva); built by BrahMos Aerospace, a 1998 DRDO–NPOM joint venture.
▸ Cruise Missile: A guided missile that flies a sustained, largely level, self-propelled course to its target (vs. a ballistic missile’s arcing trajectory).
▸ Supersonic vs. Subsonic: BrahMos cruises at ~Mach 2.8 (supersonic) throughout flight, unlike subsonic cruise missiles (e.g., Tomahawk), giving less interception time.
▸ Fire and Forget: A missile that requires no further operator guidance after launch, using onboard guidance to reach the target.
▸ Ramjet: An air-breathing jet engine with no moving compressor; efficient only at supersonic speeds — used as BrahMos’s second-stage sustainer.
▸ Sea-skimming: Flying at very low altitude (here as low as 5 m) over water to evade radar detection.
▸ DRDO: Defence Research and Development Organisation — India’s military R&D agency under the Ministry of Defence.
▸ NPO Mashinostroyeniya (NPOM): Russian missile design bureau; Russian partner in BrahMos Aerospace.
▸ MTCR (Missile Technology Control Regime): Export-control regime limiting missiles capable of >300 km range / >500 kg payload; India joined in 2016, enabling longer-range and export BrahMos variants.
▸ Transport Launch Canister (TLC): Sealed container that stores, transports, and launches the missile.
▸ Operation Sindoor (2025): India–Pakistan military exchange in which BrahMos was reportedly used against Pakistani targets.
▸ Shangri-La Dialogue: Asia’s premier inter-governmental defence summit, held annually in Singapore (organised by the IISS).
Question Section (MCQs)
Q1. The BrahMos missile is a joint venture between India’s DRDO and which Russian entity? (a) Almaz-Antey (b) NPO Mashinostroyeniya (c) Roscosmos (d) Sukhoi
Q2. Consider the following statements about BrahMos:
- Its name combines the Brahmaputra and Moskva rivers.
- It is a subsonic cruise missile.
- It operates on a “Fire and Forget” principle. Which are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 1 and 3 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Q3. The BrahMos missile can be launched from which of the following platforms?
- Land 2. Ship 3. Submarine 4. Aircraft (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 1, 2 and 3 only (c) 2, 3 and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Q4. Which country was the first foreign buyer of the BrahMos missile? (a) Vietnam (b) Indonesia (c) Philippines (d) Thailand
Q5. The BrahMos uses which propulsion configuration? (a) Single-stage solid propellant (b) Solid-propellant booster + liquid-fuelled ramjet sustainer (c) Twin liquid rocket stages (d) Turbofan engine
Q6. Consider the following statements regarding the 2026 BrahMos export developments:
- India confirmed a signed deal with Vietnam at the Shangri-La Dialogue.
- The reported Vietnam deal is worth around ₹5,800 crore.
- The agreement with Indonesia had already been formally announced and delivered. Which are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Q7. India’s ability to develop extended-range BrahMos variants was facilitated by its membership of: (a) NSG (b) MTCR (c) Wassenaar Arrangement (d) Australia Group
Q8. The approximate cruising speed of the BrahMos missile is: (a) Mach 0.8 (b) Mach 1.5 (c) Mach 2.8 (d) Mach 5
Q9. The Shangri-La Dialogue, where the Vietnam deal was confirmed, is held annually in: (a) Singapore (b) Hanoi (c) Jakarta (d) New Delhi
Q10. Match the variant with its description: A. BrahMos-A — 1. Hypersonic version under development B. BrahMos-ER — 2. Air-launched (Su-30MKI) C. BrahMos-NG — 3. Extended-range version D. BrahMos-II — 4. Lighter, next-generation version (a) A-2, B-3, C-4, D-1 (b) A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4 (c) A-2, B-4, C-3, D-1 (d) A-3, B-2, C-1, D-4
Answer Key with Explanations
▸ Q1 → (b) NPO Mashinostroyeniya. BrahMos Aerospace (1998) is a JV between India’s DRDO and Russia’s NPOM; India holds 50.5%, Russia 49.5%.
▸ Q2 → (b) 1 and 3 only. Statement 2 is wrong — BrahMos is supersonic (~Mach 2.8), which is precisely what makes it hard to intercept. The name and the Fire-and-Forget principle (1 and 3) are correct.
▸ Q3 → (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4. It is a “universal” missile, launchable from land, sea, sub-sea, and air platforms.
▸ Q4 → (c) Philippines. The Philippines signed the first foreign-export contract (~$375 million, 2022); deliveries began in 2024.
▸ Q5 → (b) Two-stage: a solid-propellant booster accelerates it to supersonic speed, then a liquid-fuelled ramjet sustains the cruise.
▸ Q6 → (a) 1 and 2 only. Statement 3 is wrong — the Indonesia pact was described as being in the final stages, not formally announced and delivered. The Vietnam deal confirmation and the ~₹5,800 crore figure are correct.
▸ Q7 → (b) MTCR. India joined the Missile Technology Control Regime in 2016, removing the 290 km export/range constraint and enabling extended-range variants.
▸ Q8 → (c) Mach 2.8 — roughly three times the speed of sound.
▸ Q9 → (a) Singapore. The Shangri-La Dialogue is the annual IISS-organised defence summit held in Singapore.
▸ Q10 → (a) A-2, B-3, C-4, D-1. BrahMos-A (air-launched, Su-30MKI); BrahMos-ER (extended range); BrahMos-NG (next-gen, lighter); BrahMos-II (hypersonic, under development).