India has launched the second French Scorpene-class submarine, but the Khanderi will not be equipped with torpedoes because the $200 million tender to buy them remains undecided by the Ministry of Defense (MoD) since it was created five years ago.
The MoD has put on hold the acquisition of 98 Black Shark heavyweight
torpedoes, to be mounted on Scorpene submarines from WASS, a subsidiary
of Italian firm Leonardo.
Plans to procure Black Shark torpedoes for the Indian Navy from WASS was
canceled in May, an MoD spokesman confirmed with Defense News last
year. The decision came in the wake of corruption charges involving
another subsidiary of Leonardo, AgustaWestland and the Indian National
Congress political party.
With the Khanderi's launch on Thursday, the sub is set to undergo
rigorous trials until the end of the year. When the trials are over, the
sub will be commissioned into the Indian Navy as INS Khanderi, an
Indian Navy official explained.
"The force strength of submarines is very low at this point. The reason
for this situation is the closure of Shisumar (German HDW) class project
and delay in the Scorpene project. The existing submarines are less
than 25 years old. With this background, launch of the second submarine
at [state-owned Mazagon Dock Limited] MDL is of great importance,"
retired Indian Navy Captain Shyam Kumar Singh offered.
However, Anil Jai Singh, a retired Indian Navy commodore and defense
analyst, believes there is still room for improvement in India's
submarine industry. "Submarine construction in India will truly come of
age when we are able to design and build our own submarines. The first
two Scorpene submarines have been built in India to complete
specifications provided by DCNS France. In this case, most of the
submarine is imported with some indigenous content," he said.
The Khanderi is part of six Scorpene-class submarines being built by MDL
under a $3.5 billion contract signed in 2004 between India and DCNS of
France.
The Scorpene-building program is behind by more than three years and its
cost has escalated by more than $1 billion. The first of the six
Scorpene-class subs, Kalvari, is at sea but is yet to be officially
inducted, the Indian Navy official noted.
The program's delay has been attributed by MoD officials to low-level
absorption of complex technology during its early years, augmentation of
MDL infrastructure and procurement of MDL-purchased material.
An Australian newspaper on Aug. 24, 2016, reported that thousands of
pages of presumably secret submarine documents were on the loose. The
news threatened the operational security of India’s new Scorpene-class
submarines, prompting India's MoD to decide against mounting French
air-independent propulsion systems on the last of the two Scorpene subs,
leaving the possibility of additional orders remote.
"Considering the time frame of first submarine to be commissioned by
2018 and optimistically one every year, the current program will go on
till 2023. Placement of further orders with old specifications may not
be prudent at this stage," Singh said.
The strength of the Indian Navy's submarines has dwindled from a total
of 21 submarines in the 1980s to 13 conventional submarines plus one
homemade Arihant-class nuclear submarine and one Russian Akula-class
submarine operating on lease. China, in comparison, has a strength of 65
subs, which "is a matter concern," the Indian Navy official said.
defencenews
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.