Key Points
- Pakistan unveiled the Fatah-3 supersonic cruise missile, identified by Clash Report as a derivative of China’s HD-1 by Guangdong Hongda, on a road-mobile twin-canister TEL.
- The missile reportedly reaches Mach 3-4 with a 290-450 km range and 240-400 kg warhead, designed for land-attack and anti-ship sea-skimming strikes.
Pakistan publicly unveiled the Fatah-3 supersonic cruise missile, a road-mobile precision strike weapon that pushes the country’s Fatah missile family into a new performance tier and positions Islamabad with a direct regional counter to India’s BrahMos, according to reporting by Clash Report.
The Fatah-3 has been identified as a localized derivative of China’s HD-1 missile developed by Guangdong Hongda, according to Clash Report’s analysis. The system is mounted on a road-mobile twin-canister transporter-erector-launcher, giving it the mobility to reposition rapidly before and after a strike and reducing its vulnerability to pre-emptive targeting.
Reported performance figures place the Fatah-3 at Mach 3 to 4 in maximum speed, with a range of 290 to 450 kilometers and a warhead of 240 to 400 kilograms. The missile is designed for both precision land-attack and anti-ship strikes using sea-skimming flight profiles for the maritime role, according to Clash Report.
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The Chinese HD-1 lineage gives the Fatah-3 a design foundation with documented performance credentials. Guangdong Hongda’s HD-1 has been marketed at international defense exhibitions as a supersonic anti-ship and land-attack missile, and deriving a domestic variant from that platform allows Pakistan to field supersonic cruise capability without developing the underlying propulsion and guidance technology from scratch. The degree of localization in the Fatah-3 relative to the HD-1 baseline has not been officially specified, but the public unveiling as a Pakistani system rather than a Chinese export implies a level of domestic integration and production that goes beyond simply receiving imported missiles in Pakistani markings.
The Fatah missile family has been one of Pakistan’s most visible indigenous precision strike development programs in recent years. Earlier variants established the family’s identity as a domestically developed, road-mobile precision strike capability, and the Fatah-3 extends that trajectory into the supersonic cruise regime where Pakistan has not previously had a fielded system. Supersonic speed fundamentally changes the defensive problem facing an adversary — a Mach 3 to 4 missile compresses the reaction time available for air defense from minutes to seconds, demands more capable interceptors to engage, and requires radar systems with faster track-while-scan update rates to maintain a firing solution on an incoming target. A missile that an air defense battery has 90 seconds to engage is a qualitatively different threat than one it has 10 seconds to engage, even if the two missiles carry identical warheads.
The anti-ship role with sea-skimming profiles adds a naval dimension to the Fatah-3’s threat envelope that extends Pakistan’s strike options beyond land targets. A sea-skimming supersonic missile flying at low altitude over the water approaches at a trajectory that compresses radar detection range, since shipborne radars struggle to detect low-altitude targets at extended distances due to the curvature of the Earth. The combination of supersonic speed and sea-skimming approach profile is specifically engineered to defeat the layered air defense systems that modern naval surface combatants carry, giving the missile the best possible chance of penetrating those defenses before the ship’s crew can mount an effective response.
The BrahMos comparison that Clash Report raises reflects the competitive dynamic that has shaped South Asian precision strike development for over two decades. India’s BrahMos, developed jointly with Russia, is a supersonic cruise missile with a reported range that has been progressively extended and a speed of approximately Mach 2.8 to 3. It has been integrated onto Indian Navy warships, Air Force fighters, and Army ground-based launchers, giving India a broad multi-domain supersonic strike capability. Pakistan fielding a comparable system, even if the Fatah-3’s specifications sit within broadly similar parameters, closes a capability gap that has given India a qualitative edge in the supersonic precision strike category and restores a degree of deterrent symmetry that Pakistani planners have been seeking.
