Indian Navy Developments & Discussions

neo29

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India, Russia to ink $1.2 bn deal for 29 more MiG-29Ks

Russia is all set to reassert its numero uno status in the Indian defence market with another mega arms deal. The two nations are now poised to ink the around $1.2 billion contract for 29 more MiG-29K fighter jets for Indian Navy.

A Russian team will arrive in New Delhi this week to finetune the contract after it got the approval of Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS), chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, top defence sources said.

“The defence ministry is also now also seeking CCS approval for the fresh contract for aircraft carrier Admiral Gorshkov’s refit, with the renegotiated price of slightly over $2.3 billion,” said a source.

The two new contracts will further consolidate Russia’s position as the largest defence supplier to India, having notched defence sales worth over $35 billion since the 1960s.

Though Israel is now nipping at the heels of Russia, and the US too has bagged some big defence deals in recent times, Moscow will continue to retain its lead for the foreseeable future.

India, after all, already has over $15 billion worth of ongoing arms contracts and projects in the pipeline with Russia. Bitter wrangling over the huge cost escalation in Gorshkov’s refit had led to a distinct chill between India and Russia.

But with matters resolved now, India is also on course to formally join the $10 billion Russian project to build the Sukhoi T-50 PAK-FA fifth-generation stealth fighter.

The 29 new MiG-29Ks will be in addition to the 16 jets already contracted in the initial $1.5 billion Gorshkov package deal in January 2004. Incidentally, only $974 million had been earmarked for Gorshkov’s refit at that time.

Rechristened INS Vikramaditya, Gorshkov will now be delivered to India by early-2013 or so. But three of the 16 original MiG-29Ks have already arrived at the Goa naval airbase to constitute the 303 `Black Panthers’ squadron, with the next three slated to follow shortly.

MiG-29Ks will operate from the 44,570-tonne Gorshkov as well as the 40,000-tonne indigenous aircraft carrier being built at Cochin Shipyard, which should roll out by 2014-2015.

Armed with eight types of air-to-air missiles, including extended range BVR (beyond visual range) missiles, as well as 25 air-to-surface weapons for land-attack missions, MiG-29Ks will provide Navy with a lethal punch on the high seas.

While 12 of the first 16 fighters will be the single-seat ‘K’ variants, the other four will be twin-seater ‘KUB’ trainer versions. Similarly, four of the next 29 jets will be ‘KUB’ trainer versions.

Mega Defence Deals with Russia:
• Admiral Gorshkov for about $2.3 billion. Induction in 2013.
• 45 Mig-29Ks for about $1.7 billion
• 230 Sukhoi-30MKI fighters for about $8.5 billion. Over 105 already inducted. India likely to order another 50 jets
• Six Talwar-class stealth frigates for Rs 8,514 crore. Talwar, Trishul and Tabar inducted. Deliveries of Teg, Tarkash and Trikand from 2012
• 657 T-90S main-battle tanks for Rs 8,525 crore. Over 310 already inducted. Another 1,000 T-90S tanks to be manufactured in India

India, Russia to ink $1.2 bn deal for 29 more MiG-29Ks idrw.org
 

sayareakd

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That must be our ATV, research nuke sub, made prior to our Arihant.......

we have two nuke sub instead of one........:goodstuff::icon_salut::icon_salut:
 

Sridhar

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Indian Navy begins training coastal patrol force
11 - Jan - 2010 | RSS
New Delhi: The Indian Navy Monday began training the first batch of the Sagar Prahari Bal (SPB) coastal patrol force formed in the aftermath of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks to prevent their recurrence, an official said.

“The training for the first batch commenced today (Monday) at the Naval Gunnery School INS Dronacharya (at Kochi),” an Indian Navy spokesperson said.

The first batch will comprise of 15 officers and 100 men. The three-week course would be conducted every six months.

The force will eventually have a strength of 120 officers and 1,000 men and be equipped with 80 Fast Interception Craft (FIC). Its charter of duties include coastal protection, seaward security of coastal and offshore naval assets, assistance to civil agencies and ensuring compliance of maritime regulations.

SPB personnel will be drawn from within the Indian Navy and will serve for a fixed tenure. The force will maintain a youthful profile and will undergo specialized training in asymmetric warfare and low intensity maritime operations.

Defence Minister A.K. Antony had last February announced the setting up of the force, along with a slew of measures to secure the country's 7,516 km-long coastline.

The Nov 26-29, 2008 Mumbai terror attacks had exposed the vast coastline as the country's Achilles heel after 10 armed terrorists sneaked into the city from the sea and went on a killing spree that left 166 people, including 26 foreigners, dead.(IANS)

Indian Navy begins training coastal patrol force - By Samachaar.In
 

ppgj

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a better article....

$1.2bn Indian Navy contract for 29 additional MiG-29Ks

18 January 2010

New Delhi: With bonhomie between the United States and India cooling off perceptively, Russia may well stage a strong comeback in India's flourishing arms market. Earlier reports in the Russian media that India may contract for atleast 28 more MiG-29K fighter jets now appear to be coming true with sources in India's ministry of defence suggesting that both nations are all set to formalise a $1.2 billion contract for 29 of these aircraft for the Indian Navy.


Image: IAF

The MiG-29K (NATO designation: Fulcrum-D) is a naval variant of the MiG-29 Fulcrum fighters.

Sources in the Indian MoD have let it be known that a Russian team may soon arrive in New Delhi, probably this week, to detail the contract. It is also being suggested that the contract has received clearance from the cabinet committee on security (CCS), chaired by prime minister Manmohan Singh.

It is also being given to understand that the defence ministry is seeking CCS approval for the fresh contract for aircraft carrier Admiral Gorshkov's refit programme, with the renegotiated price of slightly over $2.3 billion.

The 29 new MiG-29Ks are over and above the 16 jets already contracted for with the initial $1.5 billion Adm Gorshkov package deal in January 2004.

The refurbished Adm Gorshkov is now expected to be ready for delivery to the Indian Navy only by early-2013, nearly five years behind schedule. It will be inducted into the navy as INS Vikramaditya.

Any enhancement of the MiG-29K contract has ramifications for the Indian Air Force's $11 billion medium range multi-role combat aircraft (MMRCA) contract, as foreign companies desperately seek to offer synergies.

The American defence contractor Boeing's F/A-18 Super Hornet offering is primarily a naval fighter which has entered the MMRCA race more to try its luck than with any serious hopes of bagging the contract. But if the Indian Navy had shown any inclinations for the Super Hornet, Boeing's chances to bag the MMRCA contract would have been strengthened as it could have argued for synergies between the air force and the navy contract.

Other contenders, Dassault's Rafale, Saab Gripen's JAS-39 are also offering naval variants.

The Russian contender for the MMRCA contract, the MiG-35, is a heavily upgraded, thrust vectoring variant of the MiG-29 family of fighters. This 4++ generation fighter carries so many new features that MiG RAC re-designated it as the MiG-35.

Its chances to bag the MMRCA contract are now boosted manifold as the IAF already operates 80 MiG -29 fighters and Russia has an agreement in place with India's Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) to manufacture an advanced variant of the RD-33 engine.

With so many synergies in place, and an enhanced Indian Navy contract to boot, the chances of the MiG-35 fighter bagging the MMRCA contract are considerably strengthened.

Meanwhile, the first four of the original lot of MiG-29Ks have already arrived in a knocked-down form and are being assembled. Till delivery of the Gorshkov, these fighters will remain land-based at the navy's Goa base, INS Hansa.

These fighters will now become part of the 303 `Black Panthers' squadron. Another batch of four fighters is expected to arrive shortly.

Atleast eight of the 45 MiG-29K fighters are expected to be the two-seater KUB version, with four in each contract, and the rest single-set fighters.

The MiG-29Ks will operate not just from the 44,570-tonne Adm Gorshkov/INS Vikramaditya but also from the 40,000-tonne indigenous aircraft carrier (IAC) being built at Cochin Shipyard. The, as yet, undesignated IAC is expected to be ready for induction in the period 2014-2015.

The Russian Navy too has opted to induct MiG-29K fighters in larger numbers, thanks to cost benefits arising from the India deal. It currently operates the heavier, longer range, Su-33 (Flanker-D) naval fighters. Operating the Su-33 is no longer cost effective because of small production volumes.

Correspondingly, the 45-aircraft order from the Indian Navy coupled with a 24-aircraft order form the Russian Navy allows per unit costs to come down substantially. The Russian Navy will take delivery of the first lot of MiG-29Ks later this year.

Russian media reports estimated the Russian Navy contract for 24 fighters at $1 billion, which matches the figure of $1.2 billion now being quoted for the fresh Indian order of 29 of these fighters.

The Su-33s will undergo a refit programme to extend their service life from 2015 to 2025.

Armed with eight types of air-to-air missiles, including BVR (beyond visual range) missiles, as well as a host of air-to-surface weapons for land-attack missions, the 4+ generation MiG-29K is a force multiplier for the navy.

domain-b.com : $1.2bn Indian Navy contract for 29 additional MiG-29Ks
 
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if the submarine can be remotely controlled - fill it up with explosives and send it on missions to take out surface ships,other subs and destroy ports.
 

sayareakd

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other than for spec ops, what else can the sub be used for?
just put a nuke inside that sub and send it to the enemy harbor, ofcourse you need to programmer the subs to be used as Unmanned underwater sub.......:viannen_10:
 

ppgj

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good info on mig 29k.

MiG-29K/KUB FULCRUM-D

Special Thanks to Nikolai Novichkov (RSK-MiG) and Yefim Gordon (Famous Russian Aircraft: Mikoyan MiG-29)

Type: Fleet air defense with an anti-surface vessel and recon role.

Versions in Service: MiG-29K; Single-Seat Multirole Fighter.
...........................MiG-29KUB; Two-Seat Multirole Fighter/Trainer.

Take Off Weight (Normal): 18,550 kg (40,895 lbs)

Take Off Weight (Maximum): 22,400 kg (49,383 lbs)

Maximum Combat Load: 5500 kg (12,125 lbs)

Maximum Speed: 1296 knots (1491 mph; 2400 km/h) - high altitude.
.......................670 knots (771 mph; 1240 km/h) - sea level.

Maximum Rate of Climb (at sea level): 17,760 metres/min (58,260 feet/minute)

Operational Ceiling:
18,000 metres (59,055 feet)

Maximum Fuel Load:
5240 kg (11,552 lbs)

Maximum Combat Radius: 459 nautical miles (528 miles; 850 km) - with internal fuel.
..................................702 nautical miles (807 miles; 1300 km) - with external fuel tanks.
..................................1889 nautical miles (2174 miles; 3500 km) - with in-flight refueling.

Engine: Two Klimov/Sarkisov RD-33MK turbofans each producing 11,100 lbs dry thrust, 19,840 lbs thrust in reheat and 19,905 lbs thrust in an emergency reheat. Engines for the Indian Navy's MiG-29Ks will have smokeless combustors, an anti-corrosive coating, a total service life of 4000 hours with a basic overhaul time of 1000 hours and a short-time increased take-off-thrust rating.

Accommodation: The pilot is seated on a 10º inclined Zvezda K-36D-3.5 zero-zero ejection seats zero/zero ejection seat under rearward hinged transparent blister canopy in a high seat cockpit. This new ejection seat offers a G load during ejection limited to 3.5 and thus reduces the risk of spinal injuries without compromising safety. The cockpit has a sharply inclined one piece covered windscreen and three internal mirrors provide the rearward view. MNPK Avionika developed the BLP-3.5-2 ejection sequencing module for the trainer variant and this module rules out ejection seat collision during a simultaneous ejection, from an aircraft whose cockpits are enclosed by a common canopy.

Design Features: The MiG-29K is based on the 'basic' MiG-29K airframe, but is lighter in answer to the Indian Navy's requirements for the smallest possible dimensions to maximize use of space on the aircraft carrier Vikramaditya (formerly Admiral Gorshkov). The aircraft is based on the original MiG-29K airframe, but without the high-cost welded aluminum lithium fuel tanks and forward fuselage. The MiG-29K's fuel tanks are situated in the dorsal spine fairing and wing leading-edge root extensions. This reportedly gives the aircraft a 50% increase over the land-based MiG-29. Flight range can also be increased by in-flight refueling capability. With a 25-year design life, the MiG-29K features a larger wing area, incorporating a longer chord double-slotted flap and drooped elevons over the 'basic' MiG-29K. The wing root has a sharp leading edge. In addition, the central fuselage integral tank and a fuselage load-carrying section, to which the arrester hook and main struts are attached, were considerably strengthened.

The nose undercarriage is able to steer through +/- 90º and houses a three-colour lamp which indicates the aircraft's position on the glide path, and its landing speed, to a visual landing signal officer. The arrester hook is also fitted with an illumination system to indicate when it is lowered. Reportedly the radar reflecting surface of the MiG-29K is 4 to 5 times smaller than that of the standard MiG-29. The aircraft will have an improved navigation equipment commensurate with its maritime role. For deck landing, the aircraft will be fitted with a special navigation system comprising instrument landing systems interacting with the ship's markers, jam-resistant coded data link and automated built-in test facilities. In the event of the pilot having to eject near the aircraft carrier, the escape system will ensure that he is ejected clear of the ship. The export 'MiG-29K' will feature a triplex digital fly-by-wire control system, with multiple-redundancy in all three channels and a mechanical back-up in roll-and-yaw channels. A proven control algorithm used in the analog-digital flight control system on the basic 'MiG-29K' will be retained.

The dual-seat 'KUB' trainer has nearly identical (90% commonality) aerodynamic characteristics to the single-seat, export 'MiG-29K' fighter and has the same wing and tail plane platform geometry. To further ease transition from the trainer to the fighter, even the forward nose sections are identical. They are equipped with similar avionics and can carry the same armament (nearly 100% commonality). The trainer variant differs from the fighter variant only in having an additional fuel tank occupying the rear-seat cockpit. Both aircraft have an in-flight refueling capability, having a retractable refueling probe in the port forward fuselage, and may also be used as tankers. With the take-off and landing weights identical to the fighter, the trainer has 8% less fuel capacity and a 7% to 10% shorter combat radius. In addition to carrying out its main training role, the trainer has a fully operational capability. Indeed, the two man crew could open up additional roles such as airborne early warning or electronic warfare. In its combat role, the second pilot will act as a weapons systems operator.

These aircraft will be capable of day/night, all-weather, year-round operation in any climate, including tropics with ambient temperatures up to +35°C (+95°F) and air humidity up to 100%. The aircraft will be able to operate singly or in groups in the face of enemy fighter opposition and in an ECM environment, operating from CTOL carriers equipped with a ski jump or from shore bases. The take-off run on a carrier deck equipped with a bow ski jump is estimated as 125 - 195 meters (410 - 640 feet). With these aircraft operating in a salty sea environment, RSK MiG has adopted special corrosion protection measures for the airframe, avionics equipment and the RD-33MK turbofans. Radar-absorbing material (RAM) coatings will reduce the fighter's RCS by a factor of 4 to 5 as compared to the 'basic' MiG-29. Both variants feature a fully retractable L-shaped IFR probe on the port side of the nose in line with the cockpit windshield. Both variants have had their forward air intake blocker doors and spring-loaded dorsal doors - for FOD prevention - installed further down*stream. This frees up internal space inside the LERXes, allowing it to be used for additional fuel.

Avionics: The MiG-29K/KUB will be equipped with Phazotron-NIIR Corporation's Zhuk-ME radar, which has a range of 150 km in detection mode and 130 km in tracking mode, against a target with a RCS (Radar Cross Section) of five square meters and can also fire missiles at four different targets simultaneously. The radar will have functions for operations in air-to-air and air-to-ground modes, using Thales' TopSight E helmet-mounted targeting system. Both variants will incorporate a ShKAl wide-angle monochrome HUD (Head-Up Display) and the 'K' variant will feature three MFI-10-7 high-performance liquid-crystal multi-function displays, while the 'KUB' variant will have seven such displays. The ShKAl HUD offers a 26° field of view, which allows the pilot to keep an eye on a much wider sector of airspace and use his weapons more effectively in that sector. The 6" x 8" liquid-crystal display has a resolution of 1024 x 768 pixels and can illustrate a digital terrain map & tactical situation data (information about aerial and ground/surface targets), thus enabling the pilot to maintain situational awareness.

The aircraft's nervous system comprises four multiplex databuses, which considerably speeds up communication between the miscellaneous electronic systems and increases its reliability. The more efficient data exchange system facilitates the integration of add-ons, should the need arise and the additional avionics can be connected to any of the four databuses, which creates numerous upgrade possibilities. The data transmission rate also conforms to the toughest existing standard (fibre channel). Although copper wires are still used as of now, fiber-optic cables will be incorporated later on. Both variants will feature a secure data link system enabling concerted action by a group of fighters. Due to the importance and complexity of the missions which the fighter will have to fulfill, the data link system will have set channels with a high data transmission rate making use of the latest type of interface. This avionics architecture is unique among today's fighters, rendering the aircraft extremely adaptable and upgradeable.

The aircraft's avionics will be based on MIL-STD 1533 bus. Although primarily to be armed with Russian weapons, Western weapons may be offered as an option. Integration of Western-made weapons is not expected to present problems, as RSK MiG has amassed experience of a variety of Western weapon systems during development of the Russian-French MiG-AT jet trainer and the mating the Kopyo radar on the MiG-21-93 for the IAF. The aircraft will also feature Sagem's Sigma-95 INS cum GPS receiver navigation system. Indian industry will supply the following equipment;

• A radio altimeter.
• An ELINT (Electronic Intelligence) set developed jointly with Russian avionics houses.
• An active ECM (Electronic Counter Measures) pod carried on the #8 hard point under the starboard wing.
• A UHF (ultra-high frequency) radio, which is also fitted to the Indian Air Force's Su-30MKI air dominance fighter.
• Two short-range radio navigation systems (for tactical area navigation and approach/landing) manufactured under licence from Thales.


Weapons: Due to an integrated weapon selection panel, the MiG-29K can use a wide range of weapons, which includes no less than eight types of air-to-air missiles and 25 air-to-surface weapons. The aircraft features eight under wing, weapons hardpoints plus a centerline hardpoint which can likewise be used for carrying bombs. The two inboard pylons under each wing can be fitted with tandem bomb racks, which effectively increases the number of hardpoints to thirteen. The weapon selection system enables the pilot to fire more than one type of weapon per attack. The aircraft is fitted with a 30mm Gryazev/Shipunov GSh-301 (TKB-687/9A4071K) single barrel gun, with 150 AO-18 rounds.

In the air superiority role, the aircraft can be armed with the close-combat R-73E and the beyond-visual-range R-77RVV-AE air-to-air missiles. In the sea-denial role, the AS-20 and the Kh-31A anti-ship missiles can be carried. In the SEAD (Suppression of Enemy Air Defences) role, the passive radar homing Kh-31P missile can be carried. Pinpoint strikes against ground targets are made possible by the Kh-29T TV-guided missile and the KAB-500KR TV-guided HE bomb or the KAB-500OD fuel-air bomb. The unguided weapons to be used include ordinary & cluster bombs of up to 500 kg (1102 lb) calibre (up to eleven FAB-500 HE bombs can be carried) and 240mm S-24B heavy unguided rockets (up to six).

Self Defence: The Russian-made IRCM (Infra-Red Counter Measures) system comprises two 16-round flare dispensers located on the sides of the engine nacelles, below the fins and fire downwards. The calibre of the flares has been increased to 50mm, which increases their burn time & heat signature and thus offering greater protection against heat-seeking missiles. The electronic warfare (EW) suite consists of the indigenous Tarang RWR (Radar Warning Receiver) and Elta's EL/L-8222 ECM pod. A pair of ECM (Electronic Counter Measures) transponders, in the wing strake, are built into the upper surfaces of the main wing.

Comments: A $740 million contract was signed on 20 January 2004, which will supply the Indian Navy with 16 MiG-29 aircraft (12 single-seat 'K' variants and 4 dual-seat 'KUB' variants). The contract also includes the full hardware for training maintenance & flying personnel, including simulators and interactive ground & sea based training systems. An option to acquire 30 additional aircraft by 2015, was also included in the contract. Reportedly in 2008, the Indian Navy exercised the option to purchase the 30 additional aircraft, which will include 4 dual-seat 'KUB' trainers. When all deliveries are completed, 38 single seat fighters and 8 dual seat trainers will have been inducted. Mikhail A Pogosyan, who serves as the head of Mikoyan, stated at Aero India '09 that the first four aircraft will be delivered in 2009 and delivery of the remaining aircraft will be completed by 2010. Vice Admiral Madanjit Singh, at a press conference on 13 April 2005, pegged the price of each aircraft at $32 million. Based on this calculation, the $740 million contract works out to $46.25 million per aircraft. The additional $14.25 million per aircraft (or $228 million in total) includes the cost of the full hardware for training personnel, simulators and interactive ground & sea based training systems.

An important part of the Indian Navy MiG-29 program, is the creation of a modern logistics system. Hence, RSK MiG has been developing such a system, involving aircraft operation with major overhauls, reduced maintenance man-hours, and full use of the infrastructure already existing in India for the servicing and repair of the MiG-29K/KUB, their equipment and engines, as well as an automated spares record & supply system. The maintenance plan during operations on a 'technical condition' basis, includes scheduled maintenance every 300 flight hours and technical condition checks every 1000 hours or every ten years; in other words the MiG-29K/KUB will have only three major checks during its lifetime. A switch to the technical condition' maintenance system cuts operating costs per flight hour by nearly 40%. A special warehouse for spares stocking is to be built in India for supporting these aircraft. This will reduce spares delivery time to maintenance personnel at the units, at a maximum of 72 hours, thus ensuring a fleet serviceability rate of 80 - 90%.

Rheinmetall Defence Electronics of Germany reported, on 15 March 2005, that they will be supplying the Indian Navy with a full-mission simulator for the MiG-29K/KUB fighter aircraft. The simulator was reportedly delivered to the Indian Navy in 2008 and has been commissioned at Dabolim, Goa. Dabolim is home to INS Hansa, the future land base for the MiG-29K/KUB fighter aircraft. It was reported in The Hindu that Indian Naval pilots have just commenced flight training, as the theory training was recently concluded. The intensive training takes place over six months in Russia, which began in October 2008. Once their training in Russia has been completed, the pilots will return to India and continue further training at the Shore-Based Test Facility (SBTF), that has been constructed with Russian help, at INS Hansa.

MiG-29K/KUB [Fulcrum-D]
 

Sridhar

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India’s maritime challenges in the 21st century

BY: Captain Devindra Sethi
Indian Army chief General Deepak Kapoor’s remarks at a closed-door seminar in New Delhi on Dec. 30, 2009, that the army was ready to fight a two-front war simultaneously with China and Pakistan, were ham-handedly projected by the media.
As India grows strong economically, Indians expect a threat to its sovereignty, especially at sea where 80 percent of its trade is plied.
The Indian Navy faces a rising threat from China’s People’s Liberation Army Navy in the Indian Ocean region and from terrorists seeking a sea route to wage attacks on land like the one on Mumbai in November 2008. It is also concerned over the increasing number of incidents of piracy off the Somali coast, from the Kenyan coast to the Seychelles islands and the Malacca Straits, which challenge merchant naval ships in international waters.
China has emerged as the second-largest economy in the world in 2010 and the need for commodities like oil, iron ore, coal, copper, aluminum and uranium to feed its economy’s gargantuan appetite has led to huge imports, most of which arrive by sea. This has led to the ambitious renaissance of its navy.
The neglect of maritime industries since 1949 now weighs heavily on China, as it finds the Indian Navy having invested heavily in shipbuilding, training and manpower over the same period of time.
The speed at which the Indian Navy provided relief aid to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations member states hit by the tsunami in December 2007 was an eye-opener to many maritime powers.
China’s communist rulers love challenges and will use this peaceful period till 2030 to rebuild the country’s maritime muscle. This is the real challenge to the Indian polity and its Admiralty.
The answer is not a numbers game but to correctly forecast strategic shortcomings and build strong competencies, which can overwhelm likely adversaries at the commencement of hostilities. A better strategy would be to deter adversaries, so that enemy naval planners realize the extent of damage that can be inflicted on prized assets.
A recent article in Newsweek indicated that the age of terror had moved on. Unfortunately, that is not the case, as is evident from the failed terrorist bombing of a transatlantic Detroit-bound flight on Christmas Day. Terror in its most virulent form is still alive and kicking.
The rising numbers of suicide bombings in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region against NATO and U.S. forces and the terror attacks on Pakistan’s major cities have severely affected civilian life. Most of it is self-inflicted, as the country has refused to evolve since 1947.
The Taliban and al-Qaida view India as a soft target, as porous frontiers exist along the coast, which were traditionally used by the Dubai-based mafia for smuggling gold.
The Indian Navy’s “brown water” capabilities, which refer to its capacity to carry out military operations in rivers or littoral environments, assisted by the Coast Guard, need a complete revamp. Policing such littoral environments is a slow, tedious, time-consuming and frustrating task, as the identity of every crew member of a fishing craft or sailing dhow must be checked.
On any given day, about 200,000 fishing boats sail along India’s west coast alone, each carrying four fishermen at the very minimum. One way to police the waters is to restrict sailing space.
Piracy of serious magnitude in international waters first surfaced off the West African coast. The scene shifted to the Malacca Straits in the late 1980s and was put down determinedly by littoral states in the 1990s.
The failed state of Somalia and the lack of governance have resulted in the present imbroglio off the Horn of Africa and have spread hundreds of kilometers to the east coast of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. Recent interceptions by coalition navies and the Indian Navy indicate a change in the complement of pirates from Somali residents to foot soldiers of al-Qaida. This has ominous portent.
Presently, India is caught within the imperatives of the blue water and brown water navy, as both are important and necessary and both have short-term and long-term implications.
The three-layer response to augment the navy, Coast Guard and Marine Police is a good start. What is needed is to ensure that neither fatigue nor flagging energy with time sets in. Terrorists need just one mistake by security forces in “brown waters” to succeed in their task.
India’s blue water navy must respond to China’s PLA Navy and sea pirates. Well-trained staff will be a recurring requirement as much as technology. For example, network-centric capabilities are excellent for above-sea surface requirements, while being dependant on an x-ray band spectrum that cannot penetrate seawater will yield no results.
Blue water sonar systems for subsurface warfare are constrained in their performance in littoral waters. India’s likely adversaries are building a formidable fleet of submarines, both conventional and nuclear-powered. These are major examples, besides others, of the realities facing specialist naval planners.
Major navies of the world, including the Indian Navy, have adopted network-centric capabilities as core competencies today. The combat areas in the 21st century have shifted to littoral waters. Will this result in suboptimal utilization of the assets built? Only time will tell.
Maritime diplomacy needs to be refashioned with the Ministry of Defense (Navy) and the Ministry of External Affairs joining hands to complement each other, especially in the Indian Ocean region. Most countries in the region have weak maritime capabilities. This can be vigorously worked upon with generous assistance from India.
The private sector in India seeks a major foothold in defense contracts today. The Indian government must assist the private sector in building merchant marine vessels or simple warships like offshore patrol vessels, on easy credit terms in Indian private shipyards, for our neighbors.
The strength of our economy will be enhanced by catering to the maritime needs of our neighbors, similar to what the United States has done for Canada and Mexico.

(Captain Devindra Sethi is an alumnus of India’s National Defense Academy, the College of Defense Management, the College of Naval Warfare, and the War College in St. Petersburg, Russia. He is a successful entrepreneur in the maritime industry and fluent in English, Russian and Hindi.


India’s maritime challenges in the 21st century idrw.org
 

enlightened1

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http://www.indianexpress.com/news/Mock-drill-by-forces-along-coastline/569812/http://www.indianexpress.com/news/Mock-drill-by-forces-along-coastline/569812/

A two-day joint drill ‘Sagar Kavach’ by the Indian Navy, Coast Guard, coastal police, and Customs checked the preparedness of the agencies to tackle 26/11 like situation.

The drill began on Wednesday and will continue till Thursday.

“The Sagari Kavach operation by various agencies began today and will continue tomorrow. However, I am not in a position to divulge the modalities of the operation,” said Inspector General Coast Guard (Western Region) S P S Basra.

According to sources, a vessel hijacking scenario will be reconstructed by the policemen posing as terrorists, who will then attempt to land on Mumbai’s shoreline by infiltrating the coastal security net in a boat. The different agencies will track down the boat and apprehend the dummy terrorists before they can accomplish their mission.
 

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Indian Navy boosts its air fleet in $1.5 bln deal - Politics/Nation-News-The Economic Times

Indian Navy boosts its air fleet in $1.5 bln deal
21 Jan 2010, 1859 hrs IST, REUTERS

NEW DELHI: India's Navy has started a $1.5 billion overhaul of its ageing Soviet-era fleet of aircraft, seeking to boost its air power in an Indian Ocean region where a growing China is threatening its traditional dominance.

The investment is one of the biggest the Indian Navy has made in recent years and reflects New Delhi's urgency to modernise its military, a move that rival Pakistan says could spark an arms buildup and destabilise an already roiled South Asia.

India plans to buy 16 new MIG-29 fighter jets, half a dozen light combat aircraft, unmanned patrol planes and multi-role helicopters. Tenders for these will be floated soon, Indian officials said.

The Navy is also upgrading its Sea Harrier fighter jets, IL-38 maritime anti-submarine warfare planes and acquiring five Kamov KA-31 patrol helicopters.

"We are acquiring new fighters and helicopters to ... supplement a new aircraft carrier we are getting soon," Commander PVS Satish, the Navy spokesman said in New Delhi on Thursday.

Analysts said the upgrade of the Navy was long due. "It is almost a matter of time before ships from China arrive in India's backyard," said Brahma Chellaney, professor of strategic studies at New Delhi's Centre for Policy Research.

India and China are locked in a battle to lead Asia. New Delhi fears China is creating an arc of influence in the Indian Ocean region, bolstering claims over what has traditionally been seen as India's backyard.

Indian officials said Pakistan, too, was modernising its Navy. Pakistan's National Command Authority (NCA), which oversees the country's nuclear weapons, said last week India's arms modernisation plans could destabilise the regional balance.
 

neo29

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Indian Navy to Get First Project 17 Frigate "INS Shivalik" in April 2010

The Indian Navy will induct its first indigenously-built Shivalik class stealth frigate in April, an official said. Christened INS Shivalik, the multi-role stealth frigate has been built at Mumbai's Mazagaon Docks Limited under Project 17. Two more such vessels are under construction. "The first of the frigates will be inducted in April. The ship has been provided with structural, thermal and acoustic stealth features to augment its potent capability," an official said, requesting anonymity. Shivalik is equipped with state-of-the-art defence against nuclear, biological and chemical attacks.

"The Atmospheric Control System filters and controls the temperature and humidity of the air coming into the ship at all times, including the air being used by the engines. It removes any radioactive, chemical or biological impurities, thereby protecting the crew and the systems even during a nuclear, biological or chemical attack," the official said. Conceived and designed by the Indian Navy design bureau, the ship will also have indigenous sensors and weapons.

"The sensors and weapons of the ship are controlled through a Combat Management System designed and developed by an Indian Navy establishment and manufactured by Bharat Electronics," the official added. The Shivalik class vessels will be the mainstay frigates of the Indian Navy in the first half of the 21st century. Their sophisticated weaponry includes the Klub surface-to-surface missiles and the Shtil and Barak air defence missiles.

The ships also have the indigenous Kavach chaff-dispensing system to counter incoming missiles, as also indigenous sonars and anti-submarine warfare systems. The ship's domestic requirements of fresh water will be met through two reverse osmosis plants, while a fully automated galley will "enable the crew to be fed Indian, Continental and Asian gourmet meals, including freshly baked bread and home-made ice-cream," the official added.

The accommodation arrangements for the 35 officers and over 250 crew have been provided by Indian conglomerate Godrej and meets the laid down criteria for crew comfort and space management.

ASIAN DEFENCE: Indian Navy to Get First Project 17 Frigate "INS Shivalik" in April 2010
 

ppgj

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Saturday, January 23, 2010

EXCLUSIVE: Barak-2/LRSAM First Flight This Year



The first flight test of the Rs 2606.02-crore Indo-Israeli Barak-2/LR-SAM air/point defence missile is scheduled to take place about seven months from now in August 2010. A "control and navigation flight test" of the LR-SAM is one of DRDO's targets for the year 2010. Sources indicate that the missile is currently undergoing simulated tests in Israel, which will be followed by in-loop simulations of the guidance system in Hyderabad from sometime in May. Israeli Navy chief Vice Admiral Elizer Marom and his Indian counterpart Admiral Nirmal Verma exchanged notes on the missile programme on January 19 during their official discussions in South Block. I'd broken the story in 2005/06 about the Barak-2 deal being signed, so it's going be be pretty cool watching the thing fly. More updates soon.

LiveFist - The Best of Indian Defence: EXCLUSIVE: Barak-2/LRSAM First Flight This Year
 

enlightened1

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http://www.timesnow.tv/Did-Navy-ignore-its-own-guidelines/articleshow/4337003.cmshttp://www.timesnow.tv/Did-Navy-ignore-its-own-guidelines/articleshow/4337003.cms

24 Jan 2010, 1042 hrs IST
After the cloud of the Sukhna Land scam over the Indian Army in Darjeeling, now the Indian Navy is under a cloud in Mumbai. The Indian Navy faces the heat over a high rise building of 53 stories, which has been sanction to build close to a naval base in the city. There are allegations that the Navy has ignored its own regulations, which prohibit any construction within 300 metres of its installations.

Mumbai's high security naval base -- INS Trata, is stone's away the high rise building under construction, which is a violation of Navy's own guidelines.

TIMES NOW acquired the Mumbai Municipal Corporation letter to the builder saying that the Navy needs to grant a No Objection Certificate (NOC). The letter said, "It is observed that your above mentioned redevelopment work site is within the 300 mts peripheral distance from the defence installation at Worli, as such you have to obtain N.O.C from Navy."

Even though the plot is just within three hundred metres of the naval base, the Navy says that it followed the rules and has not violated any guidelines.

TIMES NOW also acquired a copy of the Navy letter to the civic authorities saying that the NOC was not required. The letter read, "It is seen that the proposed site is more than 300 metres from the naval land at Worli, which does not necessitate issue of NOC by the Naval Authority."

According to the Google maps, the upcoming high rise is well within 300 metres of the naval missile base. Sobodh Kochare, a resident said, "The site is 150m from naval base. There's been no objection."

TIMES NOW asks why were the two high rises given a no objection certificate? Won't a 53-storey high rise within such proximity of the naval base pose a possible security threat?

Questions are being raised because this naval base, a high security installation, regularly test missiles crucial for national security.
 

nitesh

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cross posting:

http://www.hindustantimes.com/India...destroy-enemy-targets/H1-Article1-502948.aspx

India has developed a new generation multi-sensor, multi-weapon defence system against enemy targets on board naval ships.

The state-of-the-art 'Gun Fire Control System' (GFCS) developed by Bharat Electronics Limited will be installed on board the P-28 class of ships.

"The GFCS is a quick reaction, multi-sensor, multi-weapon, short/medium/long range defence system against air, surface or shore targets on board naval ships", a senior official of the Bangalore-based Navratna defence PSU told PTI.

The GFCS is designed to provide air, surface or shore defence with 76 MM and 30 MM guns. Its purpose is to locate a hostile target using a radar or video tracker, acting on early warning search radars and to track its approach with high accuracy, in order to obtain reliable target data.

The data is further processed and used to control the weapons by pointing it in an exact ballistic firing position for eventual destruction of the target. The GFCS continues to track the approaching target, simultaneously pointing the weapon on it, until it is completely destroyed.

The GFCS comprises five functional sub-systems: tracker, weapon control, sight control, combat management system and support systems, each of which can be used as an independent system.
 

neo29

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'Not A Single Place On Indian Coastline To Be Without Radar And Surveillance By 2011'

With an aim to create a fully integrated infrastructure in order to achieve real time coastal surveillance from remote locations, a coastal surveillance network along the coastline is being established, to enhance the surveillance capabilities and effective maritime domain awareness. Announcing this on the 33rd Indian Coast Guard Day, to be celebrated on February 1, Director General Coast Guard, Vice Admiral Anil Chopra, said here today that, "This is a Rs 350 crore project which would be in place by 2011, wherein there would be not a single place on the Indian coastline which would not be under the radar and surveillance."

Speaking on the occassion of the annual press conference ahead of the Indian Coast Guard (ICG) Day, Vice Admiral Chopra said that there has been a plan to put radars on tall infrastructures like light houses, which were there all over the coastline, for the past four-five years, but besides picking up contacts, it was important to identify them. The radars would pick contacts and the sensors would identify them, the information from which would be used centrally for coastal security, by sharing it at different levels with maritime operational authorities for responding to threats. The coastal surveillance network would be strengthened by the inclusion of optronics and other electronic sensors, which would be operational soon.

Talking about the smallest defence service, which grew from two naval frigates to 43 ships, 23 boats and 45 aircraft, the force which is grappling with a manpower challenge with its present strength of 7500 personnel, the DG on the occassion said that by 2012 the ICG would have a total of 40 ICG stations. The DG spoke about the need for quick augmentation of force levels, manpower and associated infrastructure, as coastal security post 26/11 had put the ICG on centre-stage. To meet the demands of the same, the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) had sanctioned 40 ships, 20 boats, 42 aircraft, nine stations, around 3200 manpower, and new regional headquarters.

Vice Admiral Chopra informed that in the past one year, the ICG had conducted 14 coastal security exercises and 18 operations jointly with the Indian Navy, to check infiltration, based on intelligence inputs, all of which were successful, said the DG, as the attempts were stemmed, and nothing could be detected.

To recognise the immediate need to identify the vulnerabilities and gaps in coastal security, assistance was being provided to the coastal states by the ICG, based on which 131 additional Coastal Police stations have been proposed by the service in the second phase of the coastal security scheme.

http://chhindits.blogspot.com/2010/01/not-single-place-on-indian-coastline-to.html
 

sandeepdg

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Navy to get stealth frigate by March
TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi: Navy will add another lethal punch to its growing ‘‘blue-water’’ warfare capabilities by inducting the indigenously-manufactured ‘‘stealth’’ frigate INS Shivalik in March-April after a few months of extensive sea-trials.
Excited at the prospect of inducting the 5,300-tonne frigate, which is armed with a deadly mix of foreign and indigenous weapon and sensor systems, the Navy has even made the warship the highlight of its tableau for the Republic Day parade.
INS Shivalik. which will be manned by 35 officers and over 250 sailors, is the first stealth frigate to be designed and manufactured in India, and will be followed by INS Satpura and INS Sahyadri in 2011-2012 under the Rs 8,101 crore Project-17 at MDL.

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Defa...eLabel=19&EntityId=Ar01904&ViewMode=HTML&GZ=T
 

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