Vijyes
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Dhanush is not "Self propelled". It has an APU that allows it to move, but at impractical speeds on a flat surface. It is not for covering long distances. Its for use after the guns are on site. AFAIK, M777 has been deployed as the sole tube artillery for the 17 Mountain Strike Corps. I do not think that they are going to be used at only those places where towed Arty cannot be deployed. It will be used at all locations the Corps requires them. Sometimes it might be beneficial to transport them using helicopters or deploy them at inaccessible locations, but it would not be standard procedure.
Dhanush cannot meet that requirement. The only way forward, is to have our own in-house Ultra-Light Howitzer.
Don't you think the two statements are contradictory? I am saying that Dhanush towed artillery is about 11-12 tons in weight and can be disassembled into 3 parts and carried by helicopters. I don't think the artilleries will be carried from Punjab all the way to Arunachal but just a few kilometres nearby by a quick airlift. So, quick assembling, disassembling can be done and dhanush can be transported. It is better to develop IMRH than pay for M777. Also, the IMRH helicopters will be useful in many other applications too and will serve multiple purpose.AFAIK, the arty is deployed out of range of enemy counter-battery fire (when possible) when deployed for fire-missions to support forward troops. However, when the guns have to deployed in a counter-battery role or when they are in the range and sights of enemy counter-battery units, the SOP is shoot-and-scoot (even in the era of Weapon Locating Radar). This can be done by a gun battery within minutes if it has been carried by road transport. However, for the missions where helicopters are used to carry the M-777 to otherwise inaccessible locations, shoot-and-scoot is not a favourable option due to the fact that vital aviation assets of the Corps are tied down as they are on standby for the entire mission. IMHO, the time to scoot after detection is much less for road transported guns than for helicopter transported ones.
The real use of artillery is to fire barrages of shells to prevent enemy forward movement and not to cause massive destruction. Real destructive power is with MRBL like Pinakas. Investing on M777 at such a high cost just to create salvos defeats the purpose of artillery.
M777 has a big defect in that it can fire for only 25-30km (non RAP or non-excalibur rounds) as its barrel is not strong enough to withstand more pressure. Dhanush can have a range of 38-43km and has a healthy 50% extra range which is significant. Dhanush has APUs to move them for short distance and that is actually enough for the limited battlefield mobility. One does not keep using the aerial assets to move artillery every now and then as aerial assets are needed elsewhere. The M777 lacks APU and its battlefield mobility will be slightly difficult as a result.
The only difference between the two is that Dhanush is heavier than M777 by a few tons if we exclude the fact that Dhanush has added weight of a few tons due to the APUs while M777 has none. So, effective difference in weight for "Dhanush excluding APU" and "M777" might be 6 tons - 4 tons. For all practical purpose, having a M777 artillery for the cost of 31 crore a unit instead of Dhanush at 14 crore a unit makes no sense. It is simply better to buy pinakas if cost is no bar or IMRH helicopters if cost matters. I also doubt the requirement for excessive numbers of lightweight artillery if the range is going to be so poor. It is better to deploy heavier Dhanush 10km back and fire instead of lightweight row range artillery
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