India confirmed
plans to design and build a new main battle tank (MBT) that is intended
to replace the Soviet-made T-72 tanks, used by the Indian Army,
Gazeta.ru reported.
Soviet
and Russian military hardware makes up around 40 percent of all
hardware in the Indian ground forces (it is even more in India's Air
Force — 80 percent, and Navy — 75 percent). In total, there are
around 600 T-55 tanks, almost 2,000 T-72M1 and 640 T-90C tanks.
The new tank the Indian Army plans to design and manufacture is known as the Future Ready Combat Vehicle (FRCV).
The new generation MBT will form the base platform for other armored
vehicles, similar to the Russian-made Armata platform. The Indian army
wants to use the platform for as many as 11 different tracked vehicles,
including light tracked, wheeled, bridge layer and trawl tanks,
self-propelled howitzers, air defense guns, artillery observation post
and engineering reconnaissance vehicles, and armored ambulances, the
Diplomat said.
India might likely use Russia's new Armata tank
as a prototype for its own armored vehicle, Gazeta.ru reported. Earlier
this month, defense expert Samir Patil from India's Gateway House
analytical center said his country was willing to buy the Armata
platform or some of its elements for future development of their own
tank.
"I think India would like to purchase such a combat platform for its armed forces," Samir Patil said.
What makes the Armata tank stand out from its domestic and foreign
counterparts is that the crew is securely enclosed in a multi-layer
armored capsule separated from the ammunition container. The vehicle is
fully computerized and only needs three servicemen to operate it.
The tank has an unmanned, remotely controlled turret, digitally
controlled by a crew-member located in a separate compartment. It is
believed that this would eventually lead to the development of a fully
robotic tank.
sputniknews
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