Indian Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
France Toulon, Indian Navy western fleet destroyer INS Mumbai, frigate INS Trishul & tanker INS Aditya

FRA Toulon, Indian Navy.jpg FRA Toulon, Indian Navy western fleet  - 2.jpg
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
A very good advice India should heed
India cannot and should not match China carrier for carrier, but it should emulate the Chinese strategy of shipbuilding to boost the economy.
India Needs More Aircraft Carriers But Not At The Cost Of Key Strike Elements
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- Apr 29, 2017, 10:00 am

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There is no doubt that India, which is poised to become a great power, requires more aircraft carriers.

But if the Navy spends the big bucks on a second carrier, where does it propose to get money for the crucial support vessels?

First the good news: the Indian Navy may soon tap the government for funds to build a second aircraft carrier. This would either be a 65,000-tonne nuclear-powered flattop or a 100,000-tonne supercarrier. The Navy’s move is significant because India is currently down to one carrier even as China has publicised its plan to develop six such vessels.

Now the bad news: According to Vice Admiral D M Deshpande, Controller of Warship Production and Acquisition, the new carrier could come at the expense of other projects and weapons as it is a “very big-ticket item”.

Before we analyse whether India needs more aircraft carriers, let’s take a look at the consequences of spending on carriers while ignoring other critical areas of defence.

In 1963, T N Kaul, India’s ambassador in Moscow, asked Russian defence minister Marshal Rodion Malinovsky what sort of defence preparedness India needed against the Chinese threat. The Indian Navy’s official history ‘
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’ records Malinovsky’s response.

He replied that what India needed was a strong, mobile Army, Navy and Air Force, well equipped with the latest weapons. Instead of a prestigious, overhauled, old British aircraft carrier (which he called the fifth leg of a dog and an easy target), India should go in for a submarine fleet to guard her long coastline.

Malinovsky wasn’t the first geopolitical expert who scratched his head in disbelief at a poor country acquiring a large and expensive carrier while neglecting its defence against hostile neighbours. Six years earlier, when Second World War hero Marshal Georgy Zhukov had visited India, he had disapproved of the Indian Navy’s decision to acquire an aircraft carrier, saying India was only doing it in order to make Britain happy.

Both Malinovsky and Zhukov had made pivotal contributions to Russia’s defence, especially in the Battle of Stalingrad, and as such were masters of warfare. However, on both occasions, Nehruvian India disregarded the advice of the battle-hardened commanders. The consequences of fielding an under-equipped military were visible in the next three wars.

In 1962, when the Chinese waltzed through the Himalayan frontier, the Indian Army was completely unprepared, lacking even winter clothing. INS Vikrant, which had been commissioned the previous year, played no role in the war.

Again, during the 1965 war, while the Indian Air Force flew Second World War Mysteres and Vampires against Pakistan’s latest United States-gifted F-86 Sabres, the Vikrant did not go out to sea at all.

In early 1971, when the political leadership decided to go to war, the Vikrant had been rusting in the harbour for over three years with cracked boilers. The flagship was pressed into service in a semi-fit condition because the Navy
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the Vikrant would be called a “white elephant and naval aviation would be written off”. Fleet Operations Officer G M Hiranandani told the naval brass, “Vikrant has to be seen as being operational, even if we do not fly the aircraft.”

Pakistan, on the other hand, had acknowledged its limitations and, instead of going for expensive surface vessels, decided submarines were a better option. The Pakistan Navy acquired its first sub in 1963 – four years before India did.

Because of the threat posed by Pakistan’s long-range submarine Ghazi, the Indian Navy had to hide the Vikrant in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. It was only after the Ghazi was sunk that the carrier started operations in the Bay of Bengal.

The case for more carriers

There is no doubt that India, which is poised to be the world’s third-largest economy and great power, requires more carriers. In a 2009 report titled ‘China’s Maritime Rights and Navy’, Senior Captain Li Jie, an analyst at the Chinese navy’s strategic think tank Naval Research Institute, declared, “No great power that has become a strong power has achieved this without developing carriers.”

Carriers are an essential element of sea control. According to
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, “Sea control is the central concept around which the Indian Navy is structured, and aircraft carriers are decidedly the most substantial contributors to it. This is because they possess ordnance delivery capability of a very high order, often greater than the balance fleet units in the Task Force. This is by means of their substantial integral air power, which provides integral, ubiquitous and enhanced combat power, with extended reach and rapid response capability.”

At a bare minimum, India should have three carriers – one for each seaboard, with a third on standby. India was without a carrier task force for six months in 2016 as its lone flattop INS Vikramaditya was undergoing maintenance.

Having three carriers on call is an ideal situation but is possible only if funds allow. If the Navy is prepared to sacrifice other platforms to divert funds to the second carrier, where does it propose to get money for the support vessels?

For, an aircraft carrier doesn’t travel alone. It usually operates with, and is at the centre of, a composite task force, including multi-purpose destroyers, frigates, submarines and logistics ships. The carrier task force is a self-contained and balanced force, capable of undertaking the entire range of operational tasks.

We do not want a situation like that in 1971 when a limping Vikrant was sent into battle along with only four light frigates (one of which lacked sonar) and a lone submarine to provide anti-submarine protection. In his book No Way But Surrender, Vice Admiral N Krishnan writes, “Even assuming that no operational defects developed, it would still be necessary to withdraw ships from the area of operations for fuelling. The basic problem was that if reasonable anti submarine protection had to be provided to Vikrant and the escort ships had to be in close company for this purpose, then how were 18,000 square miles to be kept under surveillance?”

The Navy had deployed the entire complement of the Vikrant’s aircraft in offensive operations against East Pakistan, leaving none for the carrier’s defence. It was a calculated risk that paid off. Had Pakistan been in possession of another long-range submarine, the story may have been different.

Don’t cannibalise the Navy

While aircraft carriers are symbols of prestige, the bits and parts needed to win wars must not be neglected. Sadly, this has happened. For instance, India’s submarine strength currently stands at 15 vessels and is behind Pakistan’s fleet of 17. Even North Korea, which can barely feed its population, has a fleet of 70 subs, which is why the United States carriers keep a safe distance from the Korean peninsula.

Submarines are the true predators of the deep and will allow India to wreak havoc on its adversaries during a war. A fleet of 24 subs (the sanctioned strength), but ideally 50 undersea vessels, can target every task force in the Indian Ocean. During the 1999 Kargil War, it was a submarine, and not a carrier, that was poised to deliver the first blow had India decided to escalate the conflict. INS Sindhurakshak was
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very close to Karachi and had its torpedoes trained on the harbour installations.

As well as subs, India needs to spend on other less glamorous but critical weapons platforms such as missile boats, frigates, stealth ships, minesweepers, land and ship attack missiles, torpedoes, shore-based radar, close-in warfare weapons, electronic warfare suites and maritime satellites.

Former chief of naval staff Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat writes in Betrayal of the Armed Forces that after the 1971 war complacency had set into the force. For instance, the Indian Navy, which had devastated Karachi harbour with its Russian Styx standoff missiles (outside the adversary’s range) and thereby taken the lead in ship-to-ship standoff missile warfare, yielded space to Pakistan in two critical areas. “(Pakistan) acquired the wherewithal to become capable of standoff air-to-surface missile warfare in which they took a 15-year lead and sub-surface to surface missile standoff missile capability in which they took a 20-year lead, all in a 25-year tenure span,” Admiral Bhagwat explains.

The Navy as a force multiplier

India cannot – and should not – match China carrier for carrier, but it should emulate the Chinese strategy of shipbuilding to boost the economy. Admiral Bhagwat points out that the Chinese military and political leadership had declared as a matter of state policy that shipbuilding would be the springboard for China’s industrial development. For India, this is especially advantageous because it is hemmed in to the north and the northeast, and the only strategic space the country has to manoeuvre is in the oceans.
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
But the brass want their toy.Where are they going to find the money?
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Indian Navy Expected to Push for Second Aircraft Carrier Funding
© AFP 2017/ Manjunath Kiran
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17:04 19.04.2017Get short URL
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2097124
The Indian Navy will approach the government for funding to build its second aircraft carrier in a couple of months.
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© AP PHOTO/ RAFIQ MAQBOOL
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New Delhi (Sputnik) – The Navy is said to be willing to submit a re-prioritized procurement plan to the government to make funds available for the second aircraft carrier. This could mean holding back on other big-ticket purchases in favor of the carrier.

"There is a lot of positivity, both from the government side as well as the Navy. I am sure within two-to-three months; we should be able to take it up, second aircraft carrier plan, with the ministry to get the funds. It is a very big-ticket item, it will have to be at the expense of things, we need to take these calls before we can go about doing it," Controller of Warship Production and Acquisition, Vice Admiral DM Deshpande said.

Indian armed forces are managing procurement at low-level budgetary allocations against the projected demand for the services. “The budgetary allocations for capital acquisition have declined for the three services not only since 2015-16. Similarly, against a projection of $21.96 billion for the capital budget in 2017-18, only $13 billion have been allocated from annual budget 2017-18 for various Services (Army, Navy, Joint staff, Air force, DGOF, R&D and DGQA). This decline in the allocation for the capital acquisition will definitely affect several procurement proposals and contracts which are to be finalized in 2017-18,” observed a parliamentary panel report on defense.

The procurement plan for capital modernization schemes may have to be reviewed and re-prioritized based on available funds, sources in the Defense Ministry said. Indian Navy has set a target to finalize the deal worth $9 billion deal including minesweepers vessels, Landing Platform Dock by end of this year while it has recently signed a deal worth $2 billion for Barak 8 missile from Israel.

The Navy will commission the country’s first indigenous 40,000-ton aircraft carrier Vikrant, currently being constructed at Kochi, by end-2018. The project has been delayed for many years and it revised the estimated cost to $2.9 billion. After decommissioning of aircraft carrier Virat, the Indian Navy is dependent on the recently acquired INS Vikramaditya (the former Admiral Gorshkov of the Russian Navy).
 

Lethe

Captain
A very good advice India should heed
India cannot and should not match China carrier for carrier, but it should emulate the Chinese strategy of shipbuilding to boost the economy.

[....]

While aircraft carriers are symbols of prestige, the bits and parts needed to win wars must not be neglected. Sadly, this has happened. For instance, India’s submarine strength currently stands at 15 vessels and is behind Pakistan’s fleet of 17. Even North Korea, which can barely feed its population, has a fleet of 70 subs, which is why the United States carriers keep a safe distance from the Korean peninsula.

There are some good points here, but it is difficult to take any article seriously when it talks about Pakistan having 17 submarines, or North Korea having 70 for that matter (without clarifying that these are midget submarines with limited capabilities, and probably dubious seaworthiness).

It appears the author arrives at seventeen submarines for Pakistan by taking the five submarines the PN actually has in service, adding the eight it plans to commission over the next decade, adding a nuclear boat that only exists on paper, adding three midget submarines, and assuming no retirements over the next decade(!).

I guess that "India has neglected its submarine fleet which is why it has fifteen to Pakistan's five" wouldn't read so well.
 
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Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
There are some good points here, but it is difficult to take any article seriously when it talks about Pakistan having 17 submarines, or North Korea having 70 for that matter (without clarifying that these are midget submarines with limited capabilities, and probably dubious seaworthiness).

It appears the author arrives at seventeen submarines for Pakistan by taking the five submarines the PN actually has in service, adding the eight it plans to commission over the next decade, adding a nuclear boat that only exists on paper, adding three midget submarines, and assuming no retirements over the next decade(!).

I guess that "India has neglected its submarine fleet which is why it has fifteen to Pakistan's five" wouldn't read so well.

But but just counting Indian 17 submarine doesn't tell the state of readiness So the number superiority exists in the paper only. the Scorpene program has been delay again and again
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India’s submarine fleet currently consists of 16 boats: 10 Russian SSK Kilo (Sindhugosh) Class, 4 locally built SSK U209 (Shishumar) Class, a leased nuclear-powered Improved Akula Class SSN from Russia (INS Chakra), and its own INS Arihant SSBN. Most of the Kilos have been modernized, but readiness rates for India’s existing submarine fleet sits below 40%, and the U209s will have trouble lasting much beyond 2015. With Pakistan acquiring modern submarines, and Chinese submarine building exploding, expanding India’s submarine fleet became an obvious national priority.

In 2005, India confirmed that it would buy 6 Franco-Spanish Scorpene diesel submarines, with an option for 6 more and extensive technology transfer agreements. Unfortunately, 7 years after that deal was signed, “Project 75” has yet to field a single submarine. A poor Indian procurement approach, and state-run inefficiency, are pushing the country’s entire submarine force toward an aging crisis. This DID FOCUS article covers the Scorpene deal and its structure, adds key contracts and new developments, and offers insights into the larger naval picture within and beyond India.
 

Lethe

Captain
Nobody should deny that the management of India's submarine programs, chiefly the Scorpene deal, leaves much to be desired.

That doesn't change the fact that India has fifteen submarines and Pakistan has five. Nor do any of the other points you raise change that calculus. Sure, a number of India's boats are nearing retirement age. So are two of Pakistan's submarines (which is 40% of the fleet). Sure, Pakistan plans to induct another eight boats over the next decade. India plans to induct that many nuclear boats in the same timeframe, plus the dozen conventional boats of Project 75 + 75I that are in the pipeline.

If you are going to argue, as the article did, that India has neglected its forces and has been or will be surpassed by Pakistan or North Korea (!!!), then you'd better find something other than submarines to make that argument with.
 
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timepass

Brigadier
Trial of Agni-II ballistic missile fails: Sources

NEW DELHI: A user-trial of the Agni-II intermediate range nuclear-capable ballistic missile by the
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(SFC) failed on Thursday.

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Sources said the test-firing of the
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, which has a range over 2,000-km, from the
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off the Odisha coast flopped within minutes of its launch at about 10.20 am. "The two-stage, solid-fuelled missile was just half a kilometre into its initial flight trajectory when things went awry. The mission had to be aborted," said a source.

The
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and
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refused to comment on the unsuccessful test.

The Agni-I (700-km), Agni-II and Agni-III (3,000-km) missiles have already been inducted into the tri-Service SFC, which was created in 2003 to handle the country's nuclear arsenal. But it will take another couple of years to make the Agni-IV (4000-km) and Agni-V (over 5,000-km), which are specially meant for
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against China, fully operational.

India has tested its most ambitious Agni-V missile, which is in the class of an
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, four times till now. While the first two tests in April 2012 and September 2013 were in "an open configuration", the missile was tested in its canister-version in January 2015 and December 2016.


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SinoSoldier

Colonel
Just in: India has been approved the sale of EMALS and AAG equipment for its nuclear-powered Vishal aircraft carrier.

General Atomics EMS will be exporting the equipment to India, one of three systems that will find itself onto India's future supercarriers.

China needs to step up her game or at least stop being belligerent in IOR. The power has shifted to New Delhi.
 

Deino

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
...

China needs to step up her game or at least stop being belligerent in IOR. The power has shifted to New Delhi.


Pardon ! Only due to the system being sold to India in a few years means NOTHING.
I would be very careful to say so and better look, when the new carrier enters service.

I however would not bet my money on it.
 

mr.bean

Junior Member
Just in: India has been approved the sale of EMALS and AAG equipment for its nuclear-powered Vishal aircraft carrier.

General Atomics EMS will be exporting the equipment to India, one of three systems that will find itself onto India's future supercarriers.

China needs to step up her game or at least stop being belligerent in IOR. The power has shifted to New Delhi.

the power has shifted to New Delhi??? well in that case i'll congratulate the Indians. well take note of their ''nuclear super carriers'' when we actually see it.
 
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