| Shaheen-II / Hatf-VI | |
|---|---|
| Type | Medium-range ballistic missile |
| Place of origin | Pakistan |
| Service history | |
| In service | 9 March 2004 |
| Used by |
Strategic Plans Division (Army SFCOM, Air Force SFCOM) |
| Production history | |
| Designer |
NESCOM National Defence Complex (NDC) |
| Manufacturer | National Defence Complex (NDC) |
| Specifications | |
| Weight | 25,000 kg (Re-entry vehicle 1,050 kg) |
| Length | 17.5 m |
| Diameter | 1.4 m |
| Warhead | Conventional high-explosive or nuclear |
|
|
|
| Engine | Two-stage solid-fuel rocket motor |
|
Operational
range |
2,000 km |
| Flight altitude | 100-300km |
|
Guidance
system |
Inertial navigation system GPS satellite guidance |
|
Launch
platform |
Transporter erector launcher (TEL) |
The Shaheen-II (Urdu:شاهين–اا; codename: Hatf–VI Shaheen) is a land-based supersonic surface-to-surface medium-range guided ballistic missile. The Shaheen-II is designed and developed by the NESCOM and the National Defence Complex (NDC) of Pakistan. The Shaheen missile series is named after a falcon that lives in the mountains of Pakistan. The missile is considered to be Pakistan's equivalent to the US Pershing II.
The Shaheen-II is a longer ranged variant of the Shaheen-I missile. It was the most advanced ballistic missile in service until shaheen III with the Pakistan Armed Forces. It uses a two-stage solid-fuel rocket motor designed to carry conventional or nuclear payloads. It is transported and launched by a 6-axle transporter erector launcher (TEL). According to U.S. based analysts, a satellite image of a Pakistani missile production facility taken on 5 June 2005 shows fifteen 6-axle TELs being fitted out for the Shaheen 2 missile.
Shaheen-II was successfully test fired for the first time on March 9, 2004. At that time, the National Engineering and Science Commission (NESCOM) chairman Samar Mubarakmand stated that the missile was a two-stage rocket with diameter of 1.4 m, length of 17.5 m, weight of 25 tons and a range of 2,000 km. The missile was then tested successfully again on November 13, 2014.