India's army
chief General Vijay Kumar Singh said in March that the Indian army had
been rendered inefficient, slamming the defense ministry for corruption,
which can help Russia get its foot in the door of the secluded Indian
anti-missile market.
The
recent letter by Gen. VK Singh to the Indian Prime Minister, leaked by
Daily News&Analysis, didn’t focus on the Indian anti-missile
defenses alone. The army chief criticized most of India’s armed forces
for their lack of fighting capacity and stigmatized the country’s
military procurement system as highly corrupt.
According
to General Singh, most of the Indian armed forces are underequipped
with cutting-edge weapons and ammo. The air defense, with 97% of its
hardware being obsolete, has revealed the biggest holes.
Russia
dominates Indian military imports, supplying armored vehicles, aircraft
carriers, nuclear submarines, multi-purpose fighters and helicopters.
For more than four decades, India has been leading the pack of Soviet
and Russian weapon buyers.
Still,
Russian anti-aircraft manufacturers haven’t been able to tap into any
major Indian air defense deals for several years now, being figuratively
‘locked out’ of the Indian medium and long range air defense market.
“Russia has offered India a number of modern anti-aircraft systems,”
Said Aminov, editor-in-chief with the VestnikPVO military news site,
told The Voice of Russia. “It was actively offering India its S-300 and
the “Buk” missile system, also known as Gang. But India showed no
interest in them. As a result, its air defense is currently outfitted
with the “not so cutting-edge” 2K22 “Tunguska” system, as well as with
“Shtil” and “Shtil-1” naval anti-missile systems, supplied by Russia
since the Soviet collapse,” the military maven said.
The
reason the Indians are shunning Russian modern air defense hardware,
says Said Aminov, lies in Israel’s influence and in India’s reliance on
its own powers. “Israel has already supplied them with its “Spyder” and
“Barak” systems. The Israelis have also talked the Indian military into
developing a joint “Barak-8” missile system, which covers a range of up
to 85 km. Moreover, India is now developing its own medium-range “Akash”
anti-missile complex, based on the 1960s “Kvadrat” of the Soviet
origin. But the system has been under development way too long and
already became morally obsolete.”
Experts
believe that modern India possesses no air defense capable of
protecting it from Pakistani (or Chinese) medium-range ballistic
missiles (MRBM). It’s striving to build an interceptor missile based on
its own research, which will take them a while. The Israeli “Arrow”
system isn’t likely to secure the Indian skies either, since it was
built with a considerable help from the US, which doesn’t tolerate such
military secrets being passed on to non-satellite states. In 2002,
America has already blocked a similar deal, which left India with
nothing but a “Green Pine” radar complex instead of the whole “Arrow.”
The
Pakistani missile threat is meanwhile too high for India to ignore.
That’s why India has no other alternative today than the Russian
Antei-2500 or S-300VMD, the export variant of the S-300V system.
Taking
into account India’s course towards localization of foreign military
research, it may be interested in diversifying its air defense with
imported Russian systems (the S-300VMD, for one) and a joint
anti-missile system deal, which it could then export to third countries.
The
Indian Defense Ministry scandal is only gaining pace but it has not yet
affected the Russian military industry. With the right approach,
Russian weapon-makers could get a firm foothold in the Indian market.
The only question is whether they are ready for a long and hard talk.
The Voice of Russia
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.