India’s
indigenous Arjun tank project began in 1974, and originally aimed to
replace the Russian T-54 and T-72 tanks which made up the bulk of that
country’s armored firepower. As has often been the case in India, its
DRDO government weapons development agency sought an entirely made in
India solution, even though this would require major advances on a
number of fronts for Indian industry. As has often been the case in
India, the
result
was a long and checkered history filled with development delays,
performance issues, mid-project specifications changes by India’s
military, and the eventual purchase of both foreign substitutions within
the project (now 58% of the tank’s cost) and foreign competitors from
outside it (the T-90S).
The 58.5 tonne Arjun tank wasn’t fielded with the Indian Army until
May 2009. In contrast, Pakistan’s much more time-limited, scope-limited,
and budget conscious approach in developing and successfully fielding
its T-80UD “Al-Khalid” tank is often cited by Arjun’s detractors.
The Russian T-90S will form the mainstay of India’s future force, despite that tank’sperformance issues in hot weather. That won’t change, but after beating the T-90 in a number of trials, the Arjun now has a clear future in India…
Arjun Cap, and T-90S Trade
The Arjun is an indigenous project, but not wholly so. Imported items such as the
engine/
power pack, gunner’s main sight, and other components account for 58%
of each tank’s cost. This is not uncommon around the world. Israel’s
Merkava tank family also relies on a foreign-built engine, for instance,
as does France’s Leclerc.
It is uncommon among Indian policy-makers, but the reality is that a
series of project failures gave them little choice. The Arjun has been
plagued with a mix of problems over its 36-year development history,
including its fire control system, suspension issues, and poor mobility
due to excessive weight. It has also grown from a 40-tonne tank with a
105mm gun, to a 62-67 tonne tank with a 120mm gun. Predictably, project
costs spiraled up from Rs 15.5 crore in 1974 to Rs 306 crore (INR 3.06
trillion). The army was not pleased. In an unusual stance, they accepted
the tank only after a third-party audit by an
international tank manufacturer, and orders were strictly limited.
The Indian army didn’t even stand up its 1st Arjun armored regiment
until May 2009, 35 years after the program began. To underscore the
point, even that milestone followed a development that seemed to end the
platform’s future. In July 2008, India had announced that production of
the Arjun would be capped at the already-committed total of 124
vehicles. Instead, development would begin on a new next-generation
tank, designed to survive and serve until 2040 or so.
That appeared to close the book on a failed project, but opinion in
India was sharply split. Many observers cited this as the final failure.
Other were noting the problems with the T-90s, and the Army’s refusal
to conduct side-by-side tests, alongside recent test
successes that began earning the Arun some military fans. In May 2010 desert trials alongside the T-90S, the Arjun did surprisingly well.
In response, the government and the Army changed course somewhat.
Arjun production would double to 248. That’s an improvement, but DRDO
insists that a 500 vehicle order is
needed to give them the volume needed to iron out all production difficulties, and provide a platform for future development.
The Army’s plan still
calls for 1,657 T-90S “Bhishma” tanks at
about 12 crore (INR 120 million, about $2.78 million) each if prices
remain stable. About 1,000 of those are slated to be built in India by
Avadi Heavy Industries, the same firm that
builds
the Arjuns. They will be joined by just 248 Arjuns at about 16.8 crore
(INR 168 million, about $3.92 million) each, as well as 692 older T-72
tanks upgraded to the T-72M1 “Ajeya” standard.
This overall plan changes the force structure proposed in 2006, from
3,780 tanks (1,302 T-90s and 2,480 T-72s) to 2,597 higher-end tanks.
Contracts & Key Events
2012 – 2013
Aug 10/12: What’s in Mk2? An article for FORCE
Magazine clarifies some of the Arkun Mk.2?s differences from the first
version, with cooperation from India’s Combat Vehicles Research &
Development Establishment (CVRDE).
Improvements include the ability to fire the Israeli LAHAT missile
from its 120mm rifled gun barrel, Explosive Reactive Armor for added
defense, a mine plough attachment, and a shock-absorbing suspended
driver’s seat. Mechanical changes include a suspension upgraded to 70
tonne capacity, increased horn length (19 mm) on the German-built tracks
to counter track-shedding, and slightly bigger wheels. Despite an
overall weight increase from 62 tonnes to 67 tonnes, the original engine
is being kept, but the gear reduction ratio has increased from 4.4 to
5.3. That will lower top speed, but reportedly keeps acceleration as
good or better. Fuel efficiency is reportedly the same as the Mk.1.
The Indian Army also wants a wider range of ammunition types, which
have been an issue with the Arjun. Unfortunately, DRDO’s history here
isn’t reassuring. The article also mentions that the Mk.2 contract will
involve just 116 tanks, bringing the entire ordered Arjun fleet to 240.
The first Arjun Mk-2 tank is scheduled to enter operational service in
2016. With HVF Avadi looking at a production rate of 30 tanks a year,
all 116 tanks will be delivered by 2020. Livefist.
2009 – 2010
Cap removed, Arjun Mk.2 production approved; Work on Future MBT begins.
Aug 10/10: Beyond Arjun. DRDO describes its Future Main Battle Tank program to India’s Business Standard, who says:
“While costs are still being evaluated, the projections
are mind-boggling. The development cost alone could be Rs 5,000 crore.
Then, the replacement cost of the Indian Army’s 4,000 tanks – at a
conservative Rs 25 crore per FMBT – adds to Rs 1,00,000 [sic] crore.”
That’s about $1.085 billion for development, with a potential total
of $21.7 billion for the program, assuming no major cost inflation or
overruns. DRDO’s chief and Scientific Advisor to the Defence Minister, V
K Saraswat says that unlike the FICV armored infantry carrier, DRDO
will develop the FMBT just as it did Arjun. He projects about 7-8 years
from the time the project is formally sanctioned, though DRDO has been
very wrong before.
The Preliminary Specifications Qualitative Requirement (PSQR) calls
for a light 50-tonne tank, Explosive Reactive Armor plates, full
networking and situational awareness even with hatches closed, and the
ability to protect crews from radiation on a nuclear-contaminated
battlefield. Note that France’s AMX-56 LeClerc tank, which already meets
many of these requirements, is around 55 tonnes. DRDO is likely to find
that weight is a serious risk and cost issue, as it did with Arjun.
Aug 9/10: Mk2. In a written Parliamentary reply to
Shri BP Tarai and Shri Prabodh Panda, Defence Minister Shri AK Antony
confirms that the Indian Army is placing an order for “124 Arjun Tanks
Mark – II in addition to the equal number of Mark – I ordered earlier.”
The difference between the 2 versions is not yet clear, and neither is
the price. Indian MoD.
May 17/10: Arjun Mk2 OKed. India decides that it
will remove the production cap, and double production of the Arjun Mk I
tank. So far, 75 of the 124 ordered Arjuns have been delivered, and the
remaining 49 were to be delivered by mid-2010. Now, the production line
will be extended:
“The Army has decided to place fresh order for an
additional home-built 124 Main Battle Tank (MBT) Arjun… [after] the
success of the indigenous MBT Arjun in the recent gruelling desert
trials. The project for the design and development of the MBT Arjun was
approved by the Government in 1974… After many years of trial and
tribulation it has now proved its worth by its superb performance under
various circumstances, such as driving cross-country over rugged sand
dunes, detecting, observing and quickly engaging targets, accurately
hitting targets – both stationary and moving, with pin pointed
accuracy.”
Even so, the mainstay of India’s future tank fleet with remain the
Russian T-90S. The government’s DRDO agency still wants a minimum of 500
Arjuns ordered, to stabilize production lines until it can develop a
Mark-II version. Indian government PIB release | India’s Business Standard | Deccan Chronicle | domain-b |Hindustan Times | Times of India.
Arjun Mk.2 approved, production cap removed
May 13/10: Arjun-II. The Indian government gives its approval to restructure the DRDO. Among the continued programs, however, is development of an MBT ArjunMk-II tank. Indian government release | Defense News.
March 25/10: Arjun aces trials. The Hindu Business Standard: “Arjun tank outruns, outguns Russian T-90.” Excerpts:
“The importance of this comparative trial can be gauged
from a list of those who attended… “The senior officers who attended the
trials were taken aback by the Arjun’s strong performance”, an army
officer who was present through the trials frankly stated… The army’s
Directorate General of Mechanised Forces (DGMF), which has bitterly
opposed buying more Arjuns, will now find it difficult to sustain that
opposition… The current order of 124 Arjuns is equipping the army’s 140
Armoured Brigade in Jaisalmer. With that order almost completed, the
Arjun production line at the Heavy Vehicles Factory (HVF) in Avadi, near
Chennai, needs more orders urgently. The Rs 50 crore facility can churn
out 50 Arjuns annually… The Arjun’s sterling performance in the desert
raises another far-reaching question: should the Arjun — with its proven
mobility, firepower and armour protection — be restricted to a
defensive role or should it equip the army’s strike corps… Each strike
corps has 8-9 tank regiments. If the army recommends the Arjun for a
strike role, that would mean an additional order of about 500 Arjuns.”
Note also the comparative chart, showing the Arjun compared to many international tanks.
Jan 16/10: Competitive trials. IANS reports that
the Arjun main battle tank will get its long-requested trials beside
the Russian built T-90S tanks, in desert trials at the at Mahajan Range
in Rajasthan on March 1st.
“Our aim is not to determine a winner in these trials,
but to test the core strength of the tanks,” a senior official of the
Indian Army said, wishing anonymity.”
Despite that assurance, it’s generally acknowledged that poor
performance in these tests would have consequences for the Arjun
platform.
2008 – 2009
Arjun production capped at 124; Arjun indicted.
June 4/09: Exports? An article in The Hindu Business Line by a former member of the state-run Factory Ordnance Board, states that the Arjun may be attracting some export interest:
“Miffed at the continued reluctance of the Army and armed
with the credentials certified by independent audit, the DRDO is
challenging the former to conduct comparative trials of T-90 and Arjun.
The Army stalled such an exercise by first wanting at least 45 tanks in
the regiment and then postponing the trials to October. The Army is also
inserting tactical elements in the test directives… However, happily
for HVF and the DRDO, it appears that a serious RFP (Request For
Proposal) has been received from a Latin American country.”
May 25/09: Induction. The Indian Army inducts its
first Arjun Main Battle Tank armored regiment, adding 16 delivered tanks
to bring the 43rd Armored Regiment up to its strength of 45. Lieutenant
General D Bhardwaj, Director General Mechanized Forces (DGMF), accepts
the new tanks during the induction ceremony. StratPost.
Arjun Mk.1 inducted
July 22/08: Industrial. ANI reports from
India’s Technology Seminar on ‘Future Infantry Combat Vehicle and
Future Main Battle Tank,’ and the winds all appear to be blowing toward
greater private sector involvement.
Current Defence Minister A K Antony noted that the new defense
purchase policy envisages a greater role for the private sector in
supplying much needed equipment to the country’s armed forces, and added
that the focus of the new rules and procedures in the defense
procurement procedures 2008 (DPP 2008) is on ensuring speedier
procurements. Also:
“…Chief of the Army Staff, General Deepak Kapoor, pointed
out that while technology was critical for any nation’s defence system,
“what was also needed was the need to check any time and procedural
delays.” He said that while it was important to stress on indigenisation
and collaborative approach, “we should not compromise on our
operational capabilities.”
…Lt. Gen. Dalip Bhardwaj, Director-General Mechanised Forces, said
that the time was right for greater private sector involvement in
supplying defence equipment. “However, the industry must keep in mind
the defence sector’s end needs and not just the technology.” According
to him what the industry needs to do is to develop products that have a
longer shelf life.”
July 21/08: Beyond Arjun. India and Russia may be
gearing up to develop the T-90?s successor as a joint project. Rediff
quotes Nikolai Malykh, director general of Russia’s biggest tank
producer Uralvagonzavod:
“We put forward this idea (of developing the tank) at the
turn of the 21st century. The Indian side has now come up with a
similar proposal… We will take the first step when our experts go to
India to attend a conference on the future tank and prospects for the
tank-building industry.”
Moscow Defence Brief magazine claims that the new tank may have a new
main gun of up to 152 mm caliber, higher speed, a smoother ride,
improved networking, and an armor-protected crew compartment sealed from
an unmanned turret equipped with an automatic loader. A new
hunter-killer fire control system would include target acquisition in
optical, thermal, infrared and radar spectrum that will be accessible
both to the gunner and tank commander.
This is interesting on 2 levels. One item worth noting is their use
of the BrahMos program as a model. If adopted, the successor program to
the Arun tank is likely to have far less DRDO involvement and control.
The second item is the feature set itself, which reflects Russian
thinking. It’s worth reminding oneself, however, no deal has been signed
as of yet. Initial wish lists for features are just that, until a
working model is fielded. Rediff report.
July 7/08: Capped. India decides to cap production of the Arjun tank at 124. (Toi)
- defenseindustrydaily