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- Pakistan's army test-fired the Fatah-4 long-range cruise missile on Tuesday
 
 - The Fatah-4 missile has a range of 750 kilometres and advanced navigation systems
 
 - The missile can evade air defences using terrain-hugging flight and strikes precisely
 
                                                                                  Did our AI summary help? Let us know.                                                                                 Switch To Beeps Mode                                                                         Islamabad:  Pakistan's army said Tuesday it successfully test-fired a long-range cruise missile that is aimed at strengthening the country's conventional missile arsenal. 
The Fatah-4 surface-to-surface missile has a range of 750 kilometers (470 miles) and is equipped with advanced avionics and modern navigation systems, the military said in a statement. It did not specify where the missile was fired. 
The military described the weapon as capable of evading enemy air defenses through terrain-hugging flight and striking targets with high precision. It said the missile will "enhance the reach, lethality and survivability" of its conventional missile systems. 
Pakistan's military often test-fires home-developed cruise missiles and weapons in an effort to showcase its ability to counter any threat from neighboring India. 
 
The two South Asian nuclear-armed rivals have fought three wars against each other since they gained independence from British colonial rule in 1947, and they often conduct test-launches of revised versions of their missiles. 
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.) 
 
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