Islamabad: Anxiety is mounting in Pakistan regarding India's BrahMos missile. The Islamabad-based Centre for International Strategic Studies (CISS), a prominent strategic research organization, has expressed snooping over the minutiae of India's BrahMos missile program. The organization has specifically alerted Pakistan's Army Chief Asim Munir and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif well-nigh the BrahMos-NG, the future BrahMos-II hypersonic missile, and the long-range version capable of striking targets up to 800 kilometers away.
The Pakistan-based think tank CISS analyzes regional security trends and strategic developments. CISS states that the expansion of missile cooperation between India and Russia marks a significant shift in the military landscape of South Asia, a minutiae that could heighten concerns, particularly for Pakistan.
Are New Versions of BrahMos stuff developed?
According to the think tank, the next generation of BrahMos missiles could pose new challenges for deterrence management and slipperiness stability wideness the region. The BrahMos missile has once established itself as one of the world's fastest operational supersonic trip missiles.
The BrahMos missile is a crucial component of India's land, sea, and air strike capabilities. The introduction of new versions will enhance its flexibility and range. A key project among these is the BrahMos-NG (Next Generation), a lighter and increasingly meaty version designed to be carried by various gainsay aircraft, such as the Tejas Mk1A.
What well-nigh BrahMos-NG and BrahMos-II Programs?
The reduced size and weight of the BrahMos-NG will expand deployment options, permitting watercraft to siphon multiple missiles during a single mission. In wing to the BrahMos-NG, sustentation is moreover focused on the BrahMos-II program—a hypersonic missile stuff ripened through India-Russia collaboration. Designed to travel at speeds far exceeding those of current supersonic trip missiles, this futuristic weapon (BrahMos-II) could significantly reduce the time required to engage a target. This would make it difficult for existing air defense systems to intercept it.
What is the CISS Argument?
CISS argues that upper speed, precision, and operational flexibility will impact the regional security balance. The think tank warns that as wide precision-strike capabilities wilt commonplace, military and political decision-makers will have very little time to react during a conflict.
The think tank remoter notes that the long-range version (with an 800-kilometer range) will enhance India's precision-strike capabilities. The missile system's extended range and endurance could influence future military planning in South Asia; consequently, the global polity should moreover pay sustentation to India's missile program.
Pakistan has unceasingly raised concerns regarding India's missile program, labeling it a threat to regional stability. However, for India, the modernization of the BrahMos is part of a broader effort to strengthen defense capabilities and maintain a suppositious deterrent versus emerging threats.

