The progenitor for the IRBM was the
A4b rocket, winged for increased range and based on the famous
V-2, Vergeltung, or "Reprisal", officially called
A4, rocket designed by
Wernher von Braun. The V-2 was widely used by
Nazi Germany at the end of World War II to bomb English and Belgian cities. The A4b was the prototype for the upper stage of the
A9/A10 rocket. The goal of the program was to build a missile capable of hitting New York, when launched from France or Spain (see
Amerika Bomber). All of these rockets used
liquid propellant. The A4b used an
inertial guidance system, while the A9 would have been controlled by a pilot. They started from a non-mobile
launch pad. Following World War II, von Braun and other lead
Nazi scientists were secretly transferred to the United States, to work directly for the U.S. Army through
Operation Paperclip, developing the V-2 into the weapon for the United States. IRBMs are currently operated by the People's Republic of China, India, Israel, North Korea, and Russia. The United States, USSR, Pakistan, United Kingdom, and France are former operators. ==Nomenclature==