The Amerian aerospace giant
Boeing is to sell 37 military helicopters to India, a major blow to
Premier Narendra Modi’s high-profile “Make in India” campaign to wean
the country off imported arms.
The deal for 22
Apache AH-64Ds and 15 Chinook CH-47F heavy-lift aircraft, which has been
bottlenecked for years because of red tape, will further entrench
American presence in the burgeoning Indian defense market, military
analysts say.
New Delhi
scrambled to get the deal through as Boeing had threatened to ramp up
the price after Sept. 30 by nearly 40 percent after holding it steady
for nearly six years. The big-ticket purchase will take the tally of
defense contracts won by American companies from India to US$10 billion
over the past decade.
The transaction
will have two components — one with Boeing for the helicopters and a
second contract with the US government for the helicopters’ weapons and
other equipment. The AH-64 Apache is the world’s most advanced
multi-role combat helicopter, boasting night vision capability, stealth
characteristics and beyond-visual-range missiles. The workhorse CH-47 F
Chinook, which has played a crucial role for the US Army and Marines
since it came into service in 1951, is a twin-engine equipped with a
fully-integrated digital cockpit management system.
Interestingly,
the contract comes at a time when Modi is on a visit to New York, where
he will meet US President Barack Obama ahead of the United Nations
General Assembly. The Indian premier will also travel to Silicon Valley
on the West Coast, to hobnob with American IT chiefs and promote India
as an attractive business destination to help revive the economy.
Since Modi’s
inauguration last May, his nationalist government has approved an
assortment of military projects that had stalled under the previous
Congress regime, in part over corruption scandals. New Delhi also lifted
the cap on foreign investment in the defense industry to 49 percent and
bolstered tie-ups between foreign and local companies. The overarching
reason behind these multi-million dollar deals lies in geopolitical
compulsions, said a ministry of defense official who preferred that his
name not be used.
“India’s hostile
neighborhood consists of a nuclear-armed Pakistan and big-spending
China,” the official said. “The two are also in a campaign to form an
antagonistic nuclear and defense partnership. Already, 54 percent of
Chinese arms exports go to Pakistan. So in such an environment, India
fears its scarcity of fighter jets, submarines, helicopters and
howitzers etc. will reek of a lack of defense preparedness.”
India, now the
world’s largest arms importer, expects to spend US$130 billion over the
next decade to upgrade its Soviet-era fleets of fighters, sea vessels
and war machinery. The country’s volume of major weapons imports more
than doubled between 2009 and 2013 while its share of the volume of
international arms imports increased from 7 percent to 14 percent,
according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
India’s military
spending in the draft budget for fiscal 2015 rose 7.7 percent from the
previous year to Rs2.46 trillion, equal to about 1.8 percent of the
country’s gross domestic product, roughly 2.7 times the level of fiscal
2007.
Modi’s
government is also prioritizing the deregulation of foreign direct
investment in the defense sector and attracting private sector
resources. Ironically, India’s helicopter deal with the US is in stark
contrast to the one New Delhi inked recently with Russia, India’s
largest arms supplier. Under the Russian agreement, both New Delhi and
Moscow have agreed to manufacture 200 helicopters in India with Russian
collaboration as part of intensification and diversification of
strategic ties. The agreement is part of the ‘Make in India’ program.
In the light of
the Russian deal, as well as Modi’s push for domestic production, the
Boeing chopper pact raises questions about the need for spending such
whopping sums on defense acquisition. “Continued
reliance on foreign suppliers exposes India’s lack of a clear-cut
vision of its defense industry,” said a former Indian Army officer,
Pravesh Bishnoi, who was posted in Ladakh during the Kargil War.
“Even today
Russia continues to be one of India’s most significant strategic
partners and the biggest arms supplier, grabbing about 75 percent of its
weapon imports. The remaining 25 percent is made up of the US and
Western European countries, particularly France, Britain and Germany. Do
we really need so much equipment? If we do, why not make it at home?”
Given India’s
propensity for big-ticket defense purchases, American defense giants
such as Lockheed Martin and Boeing, are all too thrilled about the vast
business potential in Asia’s third largest economy. Unsurprisingly, the
US has now emerged as India’s second largest arms supplier, accounting
for 7 percent of the total.
Such expensive
defense procurement is a double-edged sword, Bishnoi said. “The
purchases may have augmented India’s defense capability, but it has
scuppered indigenous research as technology has been imported rather
than developed here. The domestic industry gains zilch from such deals.
On the contrary, it only creates rancor among private players who have
been keen to leverage Modi’s ‘Make In India’ mantra.”
Some defense
analysts feel that India is “arming without aiming” or ploughing money
into military purchases without a serious effort to reinvent its
strategy.
“India is being
torn by two conflicting goals: the nationalistic aspiration to produce
weapons locally and the urgent need to modernize militarily, said Charat
Bharadwaj of the Institute of Defense Studies & Analysis, a New
Delhi-based think tank. “Procurement of more mega-weapons to meet
traditional security challenges is meaningless without a strategic
dimension.”
Adding to the
confusion is the government’s ambiguity over what exactly its short-term
policy about such imports is going to be. Last August, Modi’s
government surprised many by abruptly scrapping the request for global
bids to buy helicopters that the defense department had been shopping
for over the past 10 years, in favor of manufacturing them domestically.
India also reversed two more proposals for buying transport aircraft
and submarines and decided to make them at home.
What irritates
many is how India’s security interests are being advanced by sacrificing
a solid domestic arms-production base because of the country’s
dependency on imports from Russia and the US. The biggest gainer seems
to be the US.
Policy analysts
say that to be prudent, India should freeze all purchases of mega
defense equipment to first strategize its priorities. Cleaning up the
defense procurement system, encouraging domestic players to invest at
home and building a sound manufacturing base are the way to go. For this
India need look no further than its archrival China, which has
transformed itself from a major arms importer about 10 years ago to
become the world’s third largest exporter.
asiasentinel
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