Navy

India’s Carrier Strike Group Sits Behind A Layered Anti-ASBM Shield Pakistan Cannot Match

Multiple social media handles have suggested Pakistan's indigenous ship-launched anti-ship ballistic missile could take down INS Vikrant. However, the reality is very different, given point-and-area defence missiles, close-in weapon systems (CIWS), an electronic-warfare suite, and decoy and torpedo-defence systems.
India’s Carrier Strike Group Sits Behind A Layered Anti-ASBM Shield Pakistan Cannot Match

Image courtesy: X.com/@Indiannavy

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  • Published November 28, 2025 12:48 pm
  • Last Updated November 28, 2025

The Pakistan Navy this month released video and a statement saying it had test-fired an “indigenously developed” ship-launched anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM). The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) clip and press release have been picked up across mainstream media and amplified on social platforms as proof that Islamabad now possesses a missile that can threaten Indian aircraft carriers.

But multiple technical and operational points do not add up in the public record: Pakistan shows no sustained industrial trail or known programme to field a true ASBM; the frigate used in the clip lacks the vertical-launch architecture a ballistic mission requires; and Islamabad appears to lack the over-the-horizon sensor, satellite and real-time data-fusion chain needed to track and strike a moving carrier at long range.

Even so, if Pakistan somehow possessed a working ASBM, India’s indigenous aircraft carrier INS Vikrant would not be a soft target despite what breathless social-media posts suggest. Here’s why.

Would an ASBM really threaten INS Vikrant?

The short answer: no.

The long answer: No, because INS Vikrant is an operational, indigenous aircraft carrier with built-in self-defences and, crucially, a carrier battle group architecture that places layered protection between a single missile shot and the carrier itself.

The carrier class carries point-and-area defence missiles, close-in weapon systems (CIWS), an electronic-warfare suite, and decoy and torpedo-defence systems.

At the group level, the carrier is escorted by destroyers and frigates equipped with long-range surface-to-air missiles and high-performance radars such as the Multi-Function Surveillance, Tracking And Guidance Radar (MF-STAR), which can detect and engage multiple air and missile targets at extended ranges.

The Indian Navy and DRDO have also been conducting sea-based ballistic-missile-defence trials from a floating testbed, and India is developing longer-range naval interceptors under programmes such as Project Kusha. Together these layers blunt the effectiveness of a stand-alone ASBM.

To be precise:

  • Local ship defences. Vikrant-class ships have their own point-defence weapons and short-to-medium range missiles to deal with inbound threats, plus CIWS for last-ditch defence. They also host an electronic-warfare suite and decoy systems designed to confuse radar guided weapons. Those systems complicate a single-shot kill profile.
  • Escort and radar umbrella. A carrier at sea rarely operates alone. Core escorts — guided-missile destroyers and frigates — carry Barak-8 (a long-range surface-to-air missile co-developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation, DRDO, and Israel Aerospace Industries) and are fitted with MF-STAR or equivalent AESA (active electronically scanned array) radars. Those sensors and weapons create a wide, overlapping detection and engagement bubble that can detect, track and attempt to intercept high-speed threats well before they reach the carrier.
  • Sea-based BMD and future interceptors. India has tested a sea-based interceptor from the DRDO floating test range INS Anvesh and is progressing Project Kusha — a family of longer-range interceptors intended to give surface ships the capability to engage high-speed ballistic threats at greater ranges. A credible ASBM strike profile against a carrier must account for these ongoing advances.
  • Sensor and command architecture. Hitting a manoeuvring carrier at ranges of several hundred kilometres is not just a missile problem but a sensor-link problem. You need over-the-horizon (OTH) radars, persistent maritime reconnaissance (satellite or airborne), datalinks and mid-course update networks to keep a weapon on target. As your technical brief shows, Pakistan currently lacks the comprehensive kill-chain elements that China’s DF-21D/DF-26 concept uses; without that, range and speed of a rocket alone are insufficient. Why Pakistan’s ‘ship-launched A…

How would a carrier battle group respond in practice?

If a carrier-battle group senses a ballistic trajectory or receives warning of a long-range rocket launch, the layered response is sequential: early detection by wide-area sensors; engagement or distraction using long-range surface-to-air interceptors on escorts; electronic attack and decoys to degrade the missile’s terminal seeker; and last-resort CIWS intercepts.

Sea-based BMD interceptors, once matured and fielded fleet-wide, add an additional hard layer that specifically targets ballistic trajectories. Given that ensemble, a single or limited salvo of an unproven ASBM is unlikely to guarantee a carrier kill.

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RNA Desk

RNA Desk is the collective editorial voice of RNA, delivering authoritative news and analysis on defence and strategic affairs. Backed by deep domain expertise, it reflects the work of seasoned editors committed to credible, impactful reporting.

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