A surface-to-surface missile (also, ground-to-ground missile, SSM or GTGM) is a guided projectile launched from a hand-held, vehicle mounted, trailer mounted or fixed installation or from a ship. They are often powered by a rocket motor or sometimes fired by an explosive charge, since the launching platform is typically stationary or moving slowly. They usually have fins and/or wings for lift and stability, although hyper-velocity or short-ranged missiles may utilise body lift or fly a ballistic trajectory. The Fieseler Fi 103 (also known as the "V1" was the first surface-to-surface missile.
cruise missiles travel low to the ground, motor burns during entire flight, typical range 2,500 km (1,500 mi)
anti-tank guided missiles travel low to the ground, may or may not burn motor throughout flight, typical range 5 km (3 mi)
anti-ship missiles travel low over the ground and sea, often pop up or jink before striking ship, typical range 130 km (80 mi)
Different parties break down missile type by the range differently. For example, the United States Department of Defense (U.S. DoD) has no definition for LRBM and thus defines ICBM as those with a range greater than 5,500 km (3500 mi). The International Institute for Strategic Studies does not define LRBM either, but their definition of SRBM is somewhat shorter than that of the U.S. DoD. Figures above are thus representative but not definitive.