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http://www.janes.com/news/defence/jmr/jmr070830_1_n.shtml

Pakistan successfully tested an air-launched cruise missile (ALCM) named Hatf 8 (Ra'ad) on 25 August 2007. The designation 'Ra'ad' means 'Thunder' in Arabic. Following the flight, President General Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz congratulated the scientists and engineers involved in the project.

Described by Pakistan as having "a range of 350 km for now", Hatf 8 is intended to provide what were described as "a variety of Pakistan's air platforms" with a strategic standoff capability against land and sea targets. According to the official Pakistani announcement of the flight, the missile "has a low detection probability due to stealth design and the materials used in its manufacturing".

The new missile is designed to carry "all types of warheads" and has an accuracy comparable to that of the longer-ranged Hatf 7 Babur cruise missile that was tested for the first time in August 2005. Press reports of the flight have taken the phrase "all types of warheads" to imply that the new missile was designed to carry a nuclear payload.

The nuclear warheads carried by the Hatf 4 and 6 ballistic missiles are believed to weigh 700 kg. The original version of the Hatf 5 (Ghauri) carries a 1,200 kg warhead, but the improved Ghauri missile (possibly known as Ghauri 2) has a 700 kg payload. These figures are heavier than the maximum payload that can be carried by most air-launched cruise missiles, which are typically around 400 kg and account for around 30-40 per cent of the launch weight of a subsonic cruise missile.

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