Israel has exclusively offered New Delhi the Golden Horizon air-launched ballistic missile (ALBM), designed for launch from Sukhoi Su-30MKI fighters, making India the first and only country to receive such an offer, according to open-source defence reporting. With an estimated range of approximately 800 kilometres, open-source analysts note the Golden Horizon would allow Indian Air Force strike packages to engage high-value targets deep inside adversary territory, well outside the reach of enemy long-range BVR fighters and sophisticated surface-to-air missile networks.
PM Modi’s Israel visit
These reports come as India prepares to deepen its defence partnership with Israel ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s two-day visit later this month. Discussions are expected to focus on cooperation in anti-ballistic missile defence, laser weapons, long-range stand-off missiles, and unmanned systems, areas aimed at strengthening strategic ties between the two countries.
During the visit, India and Israel are likely to sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on security cooperation. However, no major defence deal is expected to be formally announced, as their broader defence collaboration—projected to be worth around USD 10 billion in the coming years, remains an evolving, long-term effort between the close partners.
What is the Golden Horizon ALBM?
Unlike cruise missiles that fly low and sustained, ballistic missiles follow a high-arc trajectory, making them far harder to intercept. Open-source defence trackers note that when launched from an airborne platform like the Su-30MKI, the combination delivers the reach of a ballistic weapon with the flexibility of air power, a capability few air forces globally possess.
At 800 km of estimated range, as reported across multiple open-source defence platforms, a Su-30MKI armed with the Golden Horizon could threaten adversary airbases, radar networks, command nodes, and logistics hubs without entering enemy fighter or SAM threat envelopes, including Chinese HQ-9 batteries deployed along contested Himalayan sectors and Pakistan’s expanding air defence architecture on the western front.
Why this matters for India’s two-front reality
Open-source defence analysts have consistently flagged India’s sharpening two-front strategic environment. China’s PLAAF continues capability build-up along the northern front while Pakistan deepens its Chinese-supplied air defence network in the west. In this context, stand-off precision strike is not a luxury; it is a deterrence essential.
As observed in open-source reporting, the Golden Horizon ALBM would give the IAF the ability to hold high-value targets at risk on day one of any conflict, without risking aircraft or aircrew inside contested airspace, fundamentally reshaping India’s escalation calculus on both fronts simultaneously.
Indigenous ALBM: The larger question
The more consequential debate flagged by open-source defence communities is whether India will develop its own ALBM under the Aatmanirbhar Bharat framework. India already has relevant foundations, BrahMos-NG air-launched variants, DRDO hypersonic research, and Agni-P miniaturisation advances, all documented in open-source programme tracking. However, analysts note a full indigenous development and certification cycle typically spans 8-12 years.
The pragmatic path, as discussed across open-source defence forums and publications, is a parallel track: acquire the Golden Horizon as a bridging capability today while concurrently building an indigenous ALBM for tomorrow, a model India has successfully followed before.
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: ZEE News










