Close Menu
Defence Line
    What's Hot

    Lavrov Hails Russia–India Ties An “Unbreakable Strategic Friendship” Rooted In Trust And Shared History

    May 13, 2026

    Air Force Revs Up F-47 Budget to $5 Billion for 2027

    May 13, 2026

    Air Force expects new KC-46 vision system in 2028 as lawmakers question price hike

    May 13, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Defence LineDefence Line
    • Home
    • Asia Pacific
    • US-Russia
    • NATO Europe
    Subscribe
    Defence Line
    Home»Geopolitics»Fatah-2 Surface-to-Surface Missile (SSM) – Quwa
    Geopolitics

    Fatah-2 Surface-to-Surface Missile (SSM) – Quwa

    Defenceline WebdeskBy Defenceline WebdeskMay 13, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    The Fatah-2 (also written Fatah-II) is Pakistan’s medium-range manoeuvrable surface-to-surface missile (SSM) – a quasi-ballistic guided missile with a domestic range of 400 km and supersonic terminal speed exceeding Mach 2. The Fatah-2 missile was developed by Pakistan’s National Engineering and Scientific Commission (NESCOM) and is marketed by Global Industrial and Defence Solutions (GIDS).

    The Fatah-2 is the second member of the broader Fatah missile family and occupies the medium-range tier of the Army Rocket Force Command’s (ARFC) layered strike portfolio. It also serves as the common platform for the Pakistan Navy’s (PN) SMASH anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM).

    ARFC training launch of the Fatah-2 missile, April 2026. Source: ISPR

    Move earlier than the market does.

    Get procurement-focused reporting, market signals, and exhibition intelligence built for teams tracking Pakistan’s defence industry and adjacent regional opportunities.

    Fatah-2 Specifications

    Parameter Specification
    Type Surface-to-Surface Missile (SSM) / Tactical Ballistic Missile (TBM)
    Developer NESCOM / GIDS
    Range 100–290 km (export); 400 km (domestic)
    Accuracy (CEP) ≤ 50 m
    Warhead Weight 365 kg
    Warhead Type Unitary blast or blast fragmentation
    Diameter 600 mm
    Length 7.5 m
    Terminal Speed Supersonic (> Mach 2)
    Propulsion Single-stage dual-thrust solid rocket motor
    Guidance INS + GNSS; all-course manoeuvre capability
    Launcher Twin-canister oblique-launch system on 8×8 wheeled chassis
    Naval Derivative SMASH ASBM (common 600 mm platform)
    Status Operational; ARFC training launch April 2026
    GIDS Fatah-2 Fatah-II surface-to-surface missile official specifications datasheet showing 290 km export range 600 mm diameter 365 kg warhead single-stage dual-thrust solid rocket motor with INS GNSS guidance
    GIDS Fatah 2 Fatah II official product datasheet Source GIDS

    Development and Induction History

    The Fatah-2 was first tested in December 2023, demonstrating a range exceeding 290 km alongside the supersonic glide vehicle and all-course manoeuvre capability that distinguish it from the Fatah-1. GIDS subsequently presented the system at international defence exhibitions, disclosing detailed specifications including the 600 mm diameter, 365 kg warhead, and dual-thrust solid rocket motor.

    The Fatah-2 was officially inducted into the Pakistan Army’s inventory in early 2024 – making it the second Fatah-series system to achieve operational status after the Fatah-1. The domestic variant is understood to have a range of approximately 400 km, with the export variant capped at 290 km to comply with Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) thresholds.

    On 28 April 2026, the ARFC conducted a training launch of the Fatah-2 – the first publicly acknowledged firing since the ARFC’s formation and the May 2025 conflict. The launch was framed as a “training launch” rather than a developmental test, confirming that the Fatah-2 has moved beyond the testing phase and is now an operational system within the ARFC’s deployed inventory.

    Supersonic Glide Vehicle and Manoeuvrability

    Unlike the Fatah-1, the Fatah-2 incorporates a supersonic glide vehicle that separates from its propulsion system in the upper atmosphere. GIDS’s official product datasheet describes the Fatah-2 as a “non-ballistic, all-course manoeuvre, supersonic” weapon system – language intended to distinguish it from conventional ballistic missiles that follow a predictable parabolic arc.

    In practice, the “non-ballistic” label is somewhat of a marketing simplification. The Fatah-2 still follows a ballistic trajectory during its boost phase – the solid rocket motor lofts the missile along a conventional arc. It is after boost-phase separation, when the glide vehicle detaches and begins its autonomous flight, that the trajectory becomes non-ballistic. From that point onward, the glide vehicle can execute evasive manoeuvres throughout the mid-course and terminal phases rather than following a predictable descent path. The system is more accurately described as quasi-ballistic – ballistic in its initial phase, manoeuvrable thereafter.

    This all-course manoeuvrability makes the Fatah-2 considerably more resilient against ballistic missile defence (BMD) systems than a conventional ballistic trajectory would allow. By varying its flight path at multiple points after boost-phase separation, the missile reduces the window available for interception and complicates the predictive algorithms that BMD radars rely on for fire-control solutions.

    The terminal speed exceeds Mach 2, though GIDS has not disclosed the precise figure. At supersonic terminal velocity, the Fatah-2’s kinetic energy alone – independent of the 365 kg warhead – adds a significant destructive component upon impact.

    Guidance and Navigation

    The Fatah-2 uses integrated INS+GNSS navigation and offers programmable trajectory options for precision strikes. The dual-mode guidance allows the missile to maintain accuracy even in contested electromagnetic environments, as the inertial system provides autonomous navigation when GNSS signals are jammed or degraded.

    GIDS claims a circular error probable (CEP) of 50 metres or less for the Fatah-2. While this is less precise than the Fatah-1’s claimed 15 m CEP, the Fatah-2 compensates with a substantially heavier warhead (365 kg) and the ability to engage targets at nearly three times the range.

    Launcher Configuration

    The Fatah-2 uses a twin-canister oblique-launch system mounted on an 8×8 wheeled chassis. This configuration supports both salvo and non-salvo modes, enabling the launcher to fire both canisters in rapid succession or space launches for sequential target engagement.

    SMASH ASBM: Naval Derivative

    The Fatah-2’s 600 mm-diameter core platform is shared with the Pakistan Navy’s SMASH anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM). The SMASH was first test-fired in November 2025 and formally unveiled for export at the 2026 World Defense Show in Riyadh.

    This common-platform relationship is significant because it allows NESCOM to consolidate supply chains across the PA and PN, amortising production costs across a larger procurement base. The SMASH adds a terminal seeker – likely active radar-homing (ARH) – to the Fatah-2’s airframe for maritime target engagement, but the propulsion, guidance backbone, and airframe structure appear to be shared.

    Comparison with BrahMos

    The Fatah-2 and India’s BrahMos supersonic cruise missile are often compared, though they occupy different technical categories. The BrahMos is a ramjet-powered supersonic cruise missile that maintains Mach 2.8–3.0 throughout its flight. The Fatah-2 is a solid-fuel ballistic missile with a supersonic glide phase – it achieves supersonic speed through ballistic trajectory and gravity-assisted acceleration rather than sustained powered flight.

    In practical terms, the Fatah-2’s all-course manoeuvre capability provides a different form of survivability than the BrahMos’s sustained speed. Where the BrahMos compresses reaction windows through raw velocity, the Fatah-2 complicates interception through unpredictable trajectory changes.

    The PA’s answer to the BrahMos’s sustained supersonic cruise capability is the Fatah-3 SSCM – a ramjet-powered missile that more directly mirrors the BrahMos’s flight profile.

    Doctrinal Role Within the ARFC

    The Fatah-2 occupies the medium-range tier of the ARFC’s layered strike architecture. Its 400 km domestic range enables engagement of targets well beyond the forward edge of the battle area – including air bases, logistics hubs, and operational headquarters.

    Together with the Fatah-1 (140 km), Fatah-3 (SSCM), and Fatah-4 (750 km), the Fatah-2 provides the PA with a multi-modal strike capability that approaches targets through different speed regimes, altitudes, and flight profiles.

    Quwa Pro

    Spot Pakistan’s Next Procurement Opportunities Earlier

    Market Intelligence for industry professionals: procurement signals, vendor activity, capability gaps, and industrial shifts across Pakistan and adjacent defence markets.

    Featured & Trusted By

    Frequently Asked Questions About the Fatah-2

    What is the range of the Fatah-2?

    The Fatah-2 has a domestic range of approximately 400 km. The export variant is capped at 290 km to comply with MTCR thresholds.

    What speed does the Fatah-2 reach?

    The Fatah-2 achieves terminal speeds exceeding Mach 2 during its descent phase via the supersonic glide vehicle.

    Is the Fatah-2 the same as the SMASH?

    They share a common 600 mm core platform. The SMASH adds a terminal ARH seeker for anti-ship engagement.

    What does all-course manoeuvre mean?

    GIDS describes the Fatah-2 as having all-course manoeuvre capability after boost-phase separation, complicating interception by BMD systems.

    Has the Fatah-2 been operationally tested?

    The ARFC conducted a training launch on 28 April 2026.

    Related Profiles

    Pakistan Market Intelligence

    Demand Tracker: Pakistan Navy’s Next Helicopter Fleet

    The Pakistan Navy operates roughly 20 Sea King helicopters – its rotary-wing backbone since 1974. With the global support base shrinking and…

    Read →


    Pakistan Market Intelligence

    How May 2025 Made Pakistan’s Strike Doctrine ISTAR-Led

    One year after the May 2025 conflict with India, Pakistan’s defence posture has evolved along two parallel, but mutually reinforcing, tracks. The…

    Read →


    Pakistan Market Intelligence

    Demand Tracker: PAF’s Training System Gap

    The PAF’s training fleet dates to the 1960s–1980s, but its frontline fighters now demand 4.5th-gen workflows. This tracker maps the gaps, vendors,…

    Read →


    Pakistan Market Intelligence

    Retrospective: Pakistan Navy Surface Combatants (2007–2026)

    Introduction Since 2007, the Pakistan Navy (PN) surface combatant fleet has seen significant expansion in numbers and advancements in capabilities. It has…

    Read →


    Pakistan Market Intelligence

    Demand Tracker: Pakistan Army’s Precision-Fire Network Gap

    Between 2016 and 2026, the Pakistan Army (PA) has built a sizable capacity for precision firing across its armour and artillery, and,…

    Read →


    Pakistan Market Intelligence

    Market Retrospective: Pakistan Army LAV Program (2007–2026)

    Between 2007 and 2026, the Pakistan Army’s wheeled armoured vehicle posture evolved from ad hoc MRAP imports to HIT-led production partnerships with…

    Read →


    Pakistan Market Intelligence

    Demand Tracker: Pakistan’s C-UAS Gap (2026)

    The development and proliferation of loitering munitions since 2020 have forced a significant rethink of anti-air warfare (AAW) planning and procurement. In…

    Read →



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Defenceline Webdesk

    Related Posts

    Taiwan is a ‘model ally,’ not trade bait

    May 13, 2026

    Fatah-1 Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS)

    May 13, 2026

    Fatah-3 Supersonic Cruising Missile (SSCM)

    May 13, 2026

    Fatah-4 Ground-Launched Cruise Missile (GLCM)

    May 13, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Economy News

    Lavrov Hails Russia–India Ties An “Unbreakable Strategic Friendship” Rooted In Trust And Shared History

    India Defence May 13, 2026

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has described Russia–India relations as a deep, trust-based and long-standing…

    Air Force Revs Up F-47 Budget to $5 Billion for 2027

    May 13, 2026

    Air Force expects new KC-46 vision system in 2028 as lawmakers question price hike

    May 13, 2026
    Top Trending

    Lavrov Hails Russia–India Ties An “Unbreakable Strategic Friendship” Rooted In Trust And Shared History

    India Defence May 13, 2026

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has described Russia–India relations as a deep,…

    Air Force Revs Up F-47 Budget to $5 Billion for 2027

    Strategic Affairs May 13, 2026

    Kris Osborn, Warrior Maven Pentagon planners are doubling down on sixth-generation dominance…

    Air Force expects new KC-46 vision system in 2028 as lawmakers question price hike

    Defence & Security May 13, 2026

    WASHINGTON — The Air Force now expects an updated vision system for…

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest Vimeo WhatsApp TikTok Instagram

    News

    • World
    • US Politics
    • EU Politics
    • Business
    • Opinions
    • Connections
    • Science

    Company

    • Information
    • Advertising
    • Classified Ads
    • Contact Info
    • Do Not Sell Data
    • GDPR Policy
    • Media Kits

    Services

    • Subscriptions
    • Customer Support
    • Bulk Packages
    • Newsletters
    • Sponsored News
    • Work With Us

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    © 2026 Defenceline. Designed by Digitwebs.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Accessibility

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.