Prahaar is developed to provide a cost-effective, quick-reaction, all-weather, all-terrain, highly accurate battlefield support tactical weapon system. The development of the missile was carried out by the
Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) scientists in a span of less than two years. The maneuvering capability, greater acceleration, better accuracy and faster deployment fills the short-range tactical battlefield role as required by the
Indian Army to take out strategic and tactical targets. The mobile launch platform will carry six missiles that can be deployed in stand-alone and canisterised mode, which can have different kind of warheads meant for different targets and can be fired in salvo mode in all directions covering the entire azimuth plane. This solid-fueled missile can be launched within 2–3 minutes without any preparation, providing significantly better reaction time than liquid-fueled Prithvi ballistic missiles and act as a gap filler in the range, between the
Pinaka Multi Barrel Rocket Launcher and
Smerch MBRL in one end and the
Prithvi ballistic missiles on the other. As per Indian military experts, Prahaar is to counter weapon systems that can fall between 40 km to 150 km range such as
Nasr. DRDO also confirmed that Prahaar is only for carrying out strikes in
conventional warfare with no nuclear use. == Testing ==