The South Belka Munitions Factory was a major subcontractor in the manufacturing of Osea's LGM-118 Peacekeeper ICBMs throughout the 1980s. Utilizing this experience in the development of ICBMs, the Belkan government requested the SBMF produce a MIRVed ICBM as part of Project Pendragon. The V2 project includes four components: the rocket itself, which is based on the LGM-118; penetration aids to spoof both radar- and infrared-based ABM guidance systems; a 9 megaton single warhead modeled after the B53 bomb's payload; and an alternate payload consisting of eight W87 warheads mounted on a MIRV bus with 475 kiloton yields each. Planned upgrades to the system would have increased warhead stability to allow for its use in railguns in anticipation of the V3's launch, as well as a variant of the ICBM-launched MIRV bus to act as a Fractional Orbital Bombardment System, but neither of these were completed before the Belkan War ended. The MIRVed variant was operated under its Osean designation as the LGM-118A while the single-warhead payload was carried on taller and more powerful LGM-118B rockets.
One LGM-118B with its nuclear payload was captured by A World With No Boundaries, which attempted to launch it in late December of 1995. The missile detonated in space when the ADFX-02 feeding it targeting data was destroyed, but trajectory analysis indicated it was intended to strike Yuktobania due to that nation's relatively poor ABM defenses compared with Osea. The simultaneous nuclear strike on Los Canas by an XB-0 armed with a V1 was also foiled. During the Cirum-Pacific War a preserved LGM-118A's MIRV bus was loaded into the SOLG, but its firing was prevented.