The Indian Air Force’s original wish to
deploy fighters with three BrahMos supersonic stand-off cruise missiles
is now an official, timeframed project for the Indo-Russian partnership.
Livefist can confirm that BrahMos, which kickstarted
an effort in 2012 to spin off a BrahMos variant that weighed half as
much as the original and dimensional smaller, has formally committed to
putting the new missile into test mode by 2021, with the specific aim of
giving the IAF a three-missile loadout option. The effort to shrink the
BrahMos, first revealed here on Livefist in 2012, also aims to extend the capability to the IAF’s upgraded MiG-29s, incoming Rafale jets
and Indian Navy’s MiG-29Ks, none of which can currently deploy a
BrahMos-A. The smaller BrahMos is likely to be designated the BrahMos NG
(the BrahMos-2 is the in-development hypersonic version of the missile).
While
the Su-30 will be able to weild the BrahMos NG in a three-missile
load-out, other platforms will get the weapon system in a single or twin
missile load-out configuration depending on simulations that will be
completed this year.
The fresh effort actually brings things full circle for the IAF. It had originally hoped the Su-30MKI platform
could be modified satisfactorily to deploy three BrahMos-A missiles —
two on the wings, and one on special belly hardpoint. Structural studies
by HAL and Sukhoi Design Bureau concluded that the modifications were
technically risky and economically unacceptable. Following six sets of carriage and separation trials,
one of two modified IAF Su-30 MKIs will test-fire a BrahMos-A from its
belly hardpoint for the first time next month against a ship target in
the Bay of Bengal.
Given the
stand-off posture an air-launched BrahMos will have with its 300 km
range (to be extended progressively to over 900 km), a three-weapon
loadout option is an sharp leg up for mission flexibility and planning.
Like the existing BrahMos base weapon,
the BrahMos-3 is being developed for submarine launch. While the
original BrahMos will be deployable from a vertical silo stack, the
miniaturised BrahMos is being developed for firing from torpedo tubes.
Livefist can confirm that BrahMos Corp. has held discussions with the
likely contenders in India’s looming mega conventional submarine build
programme, the Project 75I, and locked down assurances that their bids
will include confirmation that the BrahMos can be deployed for vertical
launch from their platforms with necessary modifications. Russia’s Rubin
Design Bureau and Germany’s ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems have made
formal confirmations to this effect on their Amur 1650 and Class 214 boats respectively.
In
an interesting related development at the International Maritime
Defence Show 2017 currently on in St Petersburg, Russian officials have
revealed the Rubin Design Bureau and India’s DRDO may sign a cooperation
agreement on their respective air independent propulsion (AIP) efforts.
DRDO chief S. Christopher, who visited Russia in March, is understood
to have been keen to forge a partnership so that India’s work so far on an indigenous AIP doesn’t lose out to delivery timeframes to the Indian Navy.
To
be executed under India’s new strategic partnership policy, the P75I
programme RFP is expected early 2018, with India’s L&T and Reliance
Defence likely to face off in the multi-billion contest to build six
winning submarine types in country.
Shiv aroor
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