From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Type of ballistic missile
A theatre ballistic missile (TBM) is any
ballistic missile with a
range less than 3,500 kilometres (2,200 mi),
[1] used against targets "
in-theatre". Its range is thus between that of
tactical and
intermediate-range ballistic missiles. The term is a relatively new one, encompassing the former categories of
short-range ballistic missile and
medium-range ballistic missile.
[2] Examples of this type of in-theatre
missile are the
Soviet
RT-15,
TR-1 Temp and
American
PGM-19 Jupiter missile, both from the 1960s.
Specific TBMs
Specific types of TBMs (current, past and under development) include:
China
-
B-611 - 80–260 kilometres (50–162 mi)
[3]
-
BP-12/A - 80–280 kilometres (50–174 mi)
[4]
-
Type 621 - 80–280 kilometres (50–174 mi)
[5]
[6]
-
Type 631 - 400 kilometres (250 mi)
[7]
-
DF-11 - 280–300 kilometres (170–190 mi)
[8]
-
DF-12/M20 - 280 kilometres (170 mi)
[9]
-
DF-15 - 600–800 kilometres (370–500 mi)
[10]
-
DF-2 - 1,250 kilometres (780 mi)
[11]
-
DF-16 - 800–1,000 kilometres (500–620 mi)
[12]
-
DF-17 - 1,800–2,500 kilometres (1,100–1,600 mi)
[13]
-
DF-21 - 1,500–1,700 kilometres (930–1,060 mi) (
China)
, (
Saudi Arabia)
[14]
France
-
Hadès - 480 kilometres (300 mi)
-
Pluton - 120 kilometres (75 mi)
- SE.4200 - 100 kilometres (62 mi)
-
SSBS S1
India
-
Agni I - 700–900 kilometres (430–560 mi)
-
K-15 - 750 kilometres (470 mi)
-
Prahaar - 150 kilometres (93 mi)
-
Pragati - 170 kilometres (110 mi) (planned)
-
Pralay - 150–500 kilometres (93–311 mi)
-
Pranash - 200 kilometres (120 mi) (planned)
-
Prithvi I - 150 kilometres (93 mi)
-
Prithvi II - 250–350 kilometres (160–220 mi)
-
Prithvi III - 350–750 kilometres (220–470 mi)
-
Shaurya - 700–1,900 kilometres (430–1,180 mi)
-
Agni II - 2,000–3,000 kilometres (1,200–1,900 mi)
-
Agni-P - 1,000–2,000 kilometres (620–1,240 mi)
Iran
-
Ashoura - 2,000–2,500 kilometres (1,200–1,600 mi)
-
Emad - 1,700 kilometres (1,100 mi)
-
Fajr-3 - 2,500 kilometres (1,600 mi)(estimation)
-
Ghadr-110 - 2,000–3,000 kilometres (1,200–1,900 mi)
-
Khorramshahr (missile) - 2,000 kilometres (1,200 mi)
[16]
[17]
-
Sejjil - 2,000–4,500 kilometres (1,200–2,800 mi)
-
Shahab-3 - 1,000–2,000 kilometres (620–1,240 mi)
Iraq
Israel
Nazi Germany
North Korea
-
Hwasong-9 - 1,000 kilometres (620 mi)
-
Hwasong-10/RD-B Musudan - 2,500–4,000 kilometres (1,600–2,500 mi)
-
Pukkuksong-1 - 500–2,000 kilometres (310–1,240 mi)
-
Pukkuksong-2 - 1,200–3,000 kilometres (750–1,860 mi)
-
Pukkuksong-2 - 2,500–3,000 kilometres (1,600–1,900 mi)
-
Rodong-1 - 1,000–1,500 kilometres (620–930 mi)
Pakistan
-
Ababeel - 2,200 kilometres (1,400 mi)
-
Ghauri-I - 1,500 kilometres (930 mi)
-
Ghauri-II - 1,800–2,000 kilometres (1,100–1,200 mi)
-
Ghauri-III - 3,000–3,500 kilometres (1,900–2,200 mi) (Cancelled)
-
Shaheen-II - 2,500 kilometres (1,600 mi)
[20]
[21]
-
Shaheen-III - 2,750 kilometres (1,710 mi)
[22]
[23]
Serbia
South Korea
Soviet Union/
Russia
Taiwan
Turkey
Ukraine
United States
Yemen
See also
References
-
^
"Theater Ballistic Missiles".
-
^
"Worldwide Ballistic Missile Inventories | Arms Control Association".
-
^
"China presents latest technologies of air defense missile systems at IDET 2015 in Czech Republic 20051510". Army Recognition. 20 May 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^ Pike, John.
"B-611/BP-12A/Toros/Yildrim". Global Security. globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^ Pike, John.
"B-611/BP-12A/Toros/Yildrim". Global Security. globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^ Choudhari, Palash; Karthikeyan, Varun; Madhavan, Anoop.
"China - India Military Balance, Ballistic Missiles". Full Afterburner. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^ Choudhari, Palash; Karthikeyan, Varun; Madhavan, Anoop.
"China - India Military Balance, Ballistic Missiles". Full Afterburner. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^ Meisel, Collin.
"Dong Feng-11 (CSS-7)". Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^ Meisel, Collin.
"Dong Feng-12 (CSS-X-15)". Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^ Meisel, Collin; Webb, David.
"Dong Feng-15 (CSS-16)". Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^ Pike, John.
"DF-2/CSS-1". Global Security. globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^
"DF-16". Missile Threat. CSIS Missile Defense Projecy. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^
"DF-17". Missile Threat. CSIS Missile Defense Project. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^
"DF-21 (CSS-5)". Missile Threat. CSIS Missile Defense Project. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
-
^
"Iran claims Zolfaghar missile has 700 km range | Jane's 360". Archived from
the original on 2017-06-22. Retrieved 2017-06-18.
-
^
"Iran New Khorramshahr ballistic missile unveiled during military parade | September 2017 Global Defense Security news industry | Defense Security global news industry army 2017 | Archive News year". 22 September 2017.
-
^
"Iran tests ballistic missile in defiance of UN resolution, US officials say".
Fox News. 2017-01-30.
-
^
"V-2 Missile | National Air and Space Museum". airandspace.si.edu. Retrieved 2023-01-21.
-
^
"Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan". Archived from
the original on January 27, 2010. Retrieved August 4, 2011.\05\09\story_9-5-2010_pg1_4
-
^
"Test launch of Pakistan's 'Shaheen-III' surface-to-surface ballistic missile successful". 2015-03-09.
-
^
"Pakistan Conducts Successful test launch of Shaheen III". The Express Tribune. 9 March 2015. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
-
^
"Giant leap: Agni-V, India's 1st ICBM, fired successfully from canister".
The Times of India. February 2015.
-
^
Missile Thread
Archived 2015-03-16 at the
Wayback Machine
-
^ Mikhnenko, Anton.
"Ukraine expands its missile capabilities". The Ukrainian Weekly. Ukrainian National Association Inc. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
-
^
"darpa-updates-on-opfires-hypersonic-missile-test". 22 October 2022.
-
^
"Precision Strike Missile (PRSM)". 22 December 2021.
-
^
"Farsnews". en.farsnews.com. Archived from
the original on 2018-09-27. Retrieved 2022-08-10.
-
^
"Yemeni Ballistic Missile Strikes Saudi Capital, Al-Riyadh - ( Operation report)". Archived from
the original on 2017-03-27. Retrieved 2017-03-27.
-
^ ABNA (7 February 2017).
"Video: Moment of firing missile at Riyadh by Yemeni forces".
-
^ ali javid (28 March 2017).
"Yemen resistance Ansarullah Qaher-2M missile,3 fired Saudi King Khalid Air Base 28,3,2017 مقاومت یمن".
Archived from the original on 2021-12-12 – via YouTube.
|
---|
By platform | |
---|
By target type | |
---|
By
guidance | |
---|
Lists | |
---|
|