Later this month in the famed Pokhran
weapons testing ranges in India’s western desert sector, French, Swedish
and Russian teams will arrive for one of the most crucial field trials
in their collective careers. The teams have weathered a meandering trial
process that has stretched over seven years. But the sheer value of the
prize at hand — $5.8 billion worth of air defence weaponry — makes it
impossible for the teams to even contemplate cutting their losses and
walking away.
It is, by far, India’s
largest single deal for anti-air missiles. If uncertainty has raised its
head more than a few times since 2010 when it all began, the Very Short
Range Air Defence (VSHORADS) programme, which looks to gear the Indian
Army with 800 manned twin launchers and 5,000 missiles, stands at a
precarious position that has flummoxed all three contenders in the race.
Before
the end of this month, trial teams from MBDA, Saab and KB
Mashinostroyeniya will take the now-familiar flight to Rajasthan, and
then onto the Pokhran ranges bearing their products: the Mistral, RBS
70NG and Igla-S. India currently operates an early version of the Igla
in a single shoulder-mounted launcher configuration. The systems India
is looking to purchase will be twin launchers.
Army sources familiar with the final test phase spoke to Livefist
about what will happen in Pokhran this month, providing an intriguing
picture of a deal that stands buffeted by a paradox: it is imperative
that a deal is concluded, going by the tactical air defence gaps that
the Army highlights regularly. On the other hand, several blips in the
process have pushed it out into uncertain territory. Livefist has the
state of play:
For starters, the only
system that will engage in any firing during the re-confirmatory trials
this month is Saab’s RBS 70NG. While the Russian team has been asked to
demonstrate the crucial act of target acquisition — an obvious
pre-requisite before firing efficacy can even be gauged, the French team
will be on site as observers, though the MBDA team has other
non-compliance issues to set straight during the final round.
More
interestingly, Russia is ‘back in the game’, in the words of a senior
official with the Weapons & Equipment Directorate of the Army. Those
words are significant, given that Russia simply absented itself from a
handful of earlier trial rounds, and has failed to meet requirements a
few times. While this has seemingly thrust the contest onto an uneven
playing field, no punitive or procedural action appears to have been
taken against Russia’s KBP. In case you’re wondering why MBDA and Saab
haven’t thought of lodging formal protests with the Indian MoD, our best
guess is that contenders rarely want to rock the boat and risk a full
programme abort — something that has happened several times before in
Indian contracting.
Army sources say
while all three systems have had performance or technical
compliance niggles since field evaluations began in 2012, the Russian
Igla-S had the most significant issues: firing was deemed not successful
during field trials, target acquisition continuously failed, and, to
top it all, the Igla-S didn’t have a state-of-the-art sight during
trials. To the likely consternation of the Swedish and French teams, the
overpowering sense is that Russia isn’t at any apparent disadvantage
going into the final test round.
Sources
tell Livefist that Russia’s move to field the 9K333 Verba system in
place of the Igla-S two years ago was principally because of the
latter’s performance issues. However, replacing a product mid-course
under an unusually strict set of targets charted out in the RfP was
simply not an option, and would have meant an instant reboot to the
contest. Russia was told the Verba couldn’t come anywhere near the race,
and the VSHORADS contest would only test the Igla-S.
Livefist
reached out to the three companies to get them on the record about the
upcoming trial round. While KBP declined comment, Saab and MBDA did.
A spokesperson for MBDA said in a statement over email, “We
have to respect the process and do our best to further convince the
Indian customer that MBDA’s VSHORAD is the best solution for India’s
requirements, both in terms of its operational capability and in terms
of the industrial offer we are making – namely the manufacture of the
Mistral missile under license, this includes ToT. We also stress the
advantages of the Mistral missile being the same missile that will be
arming the Rudra and LCH (the Mistral ATAM systems already integrated on
Rudra and currently being integrated on LCH). We have successfully
carried out FETs set by the Indian customer in the 3 environmental
domains stipulated – desert, sea and altitude. Our Mistral MANPADS
passed these tests including technical lab trials on time and on
schedule to the full satisfaction of the Indian customer.”
In what can only be interpreted as an indication of the playing field thus far, MBDA’s statement concludes, “Because
further FETs are now being sought by the Indian customer in a move to
carry out and conclude the fullest evaluation of the competing options,
the DPP requires that all the competing vendors are given a further and
equal chance to prove their products’ capabilities to meet the Indian
requirement.”
A spokesperson for Saab India said, “Saab
never comments on ongoing trials, and we will fully, as always,
cooperate with customer requirements. Furthermore, we are confident that
Saab’s solution of the RBS 70 NG and the HARD Radar is the perfect
system for the Indian Armed Forces’ requirement of a VSHORAD system.
Besides being the world’s most modern system in this category, it will
provide much more versatility and flexibility to India, at the lowest
life cycle cost. What is also well-known is that we are already
transferring technology to Indian companies for this program, and will
have the best Make in India offer.”
History
has shown an abort only ever a step away in any Indian arms acquisition
process. As Livefist reported last year, there has been talk of simply
scrapping the VSHORADS contest and starting it afresh. That would, by
all accounts, be disastrous: it would belie the urgency of plugging
India’s air defence gaps, the costs sunk into evaluating systems both by
the government as well as the contenders as part of the expensive ‘No
Cost No Commitment’ stipulation. And finally, given that delays have
almost never resulted in a better deal or savings for the country, it
would cement India’s already shaky reputation for being a whimsical
buyer.
While procedural back and
forth is only to be expected in India’s defence contracting process,
a question that has swollen over the last two-three years is whether
decision-making has been hamstrung once again by a system unwilling to
follow laid down rules and conclude the exercise. Has the subjectivity
that has bedeviled scores of earlier contracting efforts afflicted this
one too? Or, come the end of April, could the Army have everything it
needs to make a final recommendation on its most significant air defence
deal? We’ll be keeping a close watch.
Livefist
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