India’s Nuclear Triad Milestone

India has officially achieved a fully operational nuclear triad with the commissioning of INS Aridhaman, but its deterrence reach remains limited compared to China due to shorter-range submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs). While this milestone strengthens India’s second-strike capability, the missile gap underscores the urgent need for modernization.


India’s Milestone With INS Aridhaman

  • INS Aridhaman commissioned on April 3, 2026 in Visakhapatnam, completing India’s three-SSBN requirement.
  • This enables continuous at-sea deterrence, ensuring one submarine is always on patrol while others undergo maintenance.
  • The triad supports India’s no-first-use nuclear doctrine, providing assured second-strike capability.
  • The fleet now includes INS Arihant, INS Arighaat, and INS Aridhaman, developed under the Advanced Technology Vessel program.
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Missile Capability & Strategic Limitations

  • Current SSBNs deploy the K-15 missile (750 km range), requiring proximity to adversary coastlines for effective retaliation.
  • K-4 missile (3,500 km range) is compatible with newer submarines but not yet fully operational.
  • Planned K-5 missile (5,000 km range) would align India’s SLBM reach with other nuclear powers, significantly enhancing deterrence.
  • Until these longer-range systems are deployed, India’s deterrent remains geographically constrained.

China’s Naval Edge

  • China operates 60+ submarines, including at least 12 nuclear-powered vessels.
  • By 2035, half of China’s fleet could be nuclear-powered, according to US intelligence.
  • India’s fleet: 17 ageing conventional submarines plus 3 SSBNs, with limited missile range.
  • This disparity highlights a strategic gap, pressing India to accelerate modernization.

Next-Generation Developments

  • India is building larger SSBNs: S4 and S5*, with advanced reactors and greater displacement.
  • S4* expected commissioning: 2027.
  • Nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSNs) are also planned, with delivery projected in the mid-2030s.
  • These platforms aim to strengthen India’s Indian Ocean presence and counter expanding regional naval capabilities.

Strategic Implications

  • India’s triad completion is historic, but missile range limits reduce its deterrent credibility.
  • China’s superior fleet size and missile reach create a pressing imbalance in the Indo-Pacific.
  • India’s modernization efforts—K-5 missile, S5 SSBN, SSNs—are critical to closing the gap.
  • The coming decade will determine whether India can match regional naval power and secure its strategic interests.

Key Takeaways

  • India now has continuous nuclear deterrence at sea.
  • Missile range remains the Achilles’ heel of its triad.
  • China’s naval dominance underscores India’s urgency to modernize.
  • Next-gen submarines and missiles are India’s path to parity.

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