India has kicked
off their production of six new nuclear-powered attack submarines, which
will greatly increase New Delhi’s naval power projection once
completed.
The
secretive New Delhi program to build their own nuclear submarines was
approved in February 2015. "It has kicked off and I will leave it
at that. It is a classified project. The process has started," said
Admiral Sunil Lanba, the top dog in the Indian Navy, on Friday.At present, India has two nuclear-powered submarines: the domestically built INS Arihant and the INS Chakra, an Akula-class submarine that New Delhi has leased from Russia until 2022.
The new subs are part of the Make in India program, a key initiative of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to encourage both Indian and foreign companies to manufacture goods on the subcontinent.
One major part of Make in India is to reduce
India's reliance on foreign powers in defense manufacturing. Much of the
Indian military's armaments are manufactured elsewhere.The program has met with mixed success: the Indian-made Nag anti-tank
missile wowed in tests, while the homemade Akash surface-to-air missile
has been a $4 billion disaster of a program that took over seven years
to become operational.
More recently, PLA-N warships have been
deployed to the Pakistani port of Gwadar, which Lanba described as a
"security challenge" that India would "mitigate."
Lanba added that the Indian Navy was ready to participate in the
much-discussed quadrilateral coalition between India, the US, Japan and
Australia. The four nations have strengthened ties in the face of a
rising Beijing, with the US, Japan, and India cooperating during the
July Malabar naval exercises that involved 18 warships."We are all aware of the prevailing security scenario in our maritime domain. The continued presence of both traditional and non-traditional threats in the maritime domain demand constant attention and robust mitigating measures," Lanba told reporters.
New Delhi intends to expand its area of naval
operations as far west as the Gulf of Aden and conduct a series
of operational readiness exercises in 2018. "The continued presence
of both traditional and non-traditional threats in the maritime domain
demand constant attention and robust mitigating measures," said Lanba.
While nuclear submarines are expensive to produce, they are far
superior to conventional diesel-powered electric submarines. They are
faster, more powerful, more versatile and have a wider range since they
can stay underwater for much longer without needing to resurface and
refuel or recharge. Their additional range and power also make them
perfect to equip with ballistic missiles.sputnik
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