Indian Army: News and Discussion

WolfPack86

New Member
Joined
Oct 20, 2015
Messages
10,571
Likes
16,993
Country flag
Delays Endless, Now Indian Army Wants To LEASE Light Helicopters
In the latest chapter of its stupefyingly endless quest for critically needed light helicopters, the Indian Army has just sent word official out that it is looking to lease 20 light helicopters for the reconnaissance and surveillance role. The reason why this is absurd is that the Indian Army has been trying for two decades now to procure roughly 200 light helicopters to replace its fleet of old generation French origin Alouette-II and Alouette-III (Cheetah and Chetak) helicopters.

The army has described the target helicopters in almost precisely the same way it has always described the light utility helicopters it has sought to buy for decades — as light multi-utility platforms for reconnaissance, surveillance, armed recce, direction of artillery fire, scout role in conjunction with attack helicopters, aerial photography, airborne forward air controller and more.

While it is early to judge the army’s intentions, given the litany of Indian RFIs that have ended up being worth less than the paper they’re printed on, it is clear that the army feels pushed into a corner by difficult to explain delays in the procurement of such a basic capability. Not only has the Indian Army followed the Indian Air Force into the uncharted realms of leasing military hardware, but looking to lease 20 such helicopters indicates two things right off the bat in the event that this is a genuine quest and not an act of testing waters to see what’s out there. One, that the Army needs a fresh infusion of such helicopters on an urgent basis given a live operational situation in the northern frontiers. And two, that the Army has given up on any early forward movement on two helicopter programs that are intended to meet the army’s full requirement of such helicopters.

Of a total of nearly 400 such helicopters required by the Indian Army and Indian Air Force, HAL’s Light Utility Helicopter (LUH) and the Indo-Russian license built Ka-226T are to supply about half each. While the LUH, despite rapid strides towards a demonstrable operational capability at high altitudes including multiple operational demonstrations in Ladakh, has managed to only land orders for a dozen airframes, six each for the army and IAF, the Indo-Russian joint venture to build the Ka-226T near Bengaluru has remained paralysed for nearly seven years now, with little clarity on whether the Indian government plans to close the loop on a 2015 agreement to build 200 of the helicopters locally.

India’s military standoff with China in the high altitudes of eastern Ladakh that began in 2020 have accelerated defence procurements, but the light helicopter capability remains out in the cold.

The latest Indian Army RFI on the leasing option is only the latest in a saga of dramatic surges and aborts. In 2007 and again 2014, the Indian Army cancelled contests for acquire 197 helicopters. In both contests, Airbus Helicopters (named Eurocopter till 2013) was reported to be in pole position with its AS 550 C3 Fennec offering. A year after the 2014 abort, the Indian government announced in 2015 that HAL and Russia would negotiate a co-production joint venture around the Ka-226T, a program that has all but fallen apart. This would technically be good news for indigenous industry, given that accelerated development and testing of HAL’s LUH had given the Army the option of choosing a single Indian-origin helicopter type to meet the entire requirement of nearly 400 helicopters.

Which is where the prospect of leasing such helicopters is a bolt from the blue. To be sure, industry members indicate that the RFI was expected and that the Army had been sending out feelers for over a year now. That the Army has felt the need to even reveal that it is willing to consider leasing light helicopters establishes that the worst of India’s military procurement impulses have come full circle.

Separately, the Indian Navy’s quest for 111 shipborne naval utility helicopters (NUH) to replace its own Alouette-III helicopters is also on shaky ground. In 2022, after years of doubling down against HAL’s Dhruv helicopter for the naval utility role, the Indian Navy began paperwork to support the procurement of 60 Dhruv MkIII helicopters from HAL, a sizeable enough number to hint at the possibility that the NUH as we know it was on its last legs. But with the NUH contest not formally called off, the race could theoretically be fought between official contenders the Sikorsky S-76 (which has teamed up with Tata for the campaign), two offerings from Airbus — the H135M and AS565 Panther — and a proposed naval version of the Ka-226T.
 

another_armchair

New Member
Joined
Feb 28, 2019
Messages
12,096
Likes
54,387
Country flag

A woman, who is serving as a colonel in the Indian Army and is due to retire on Monday, has urged the Supreme Court to stay her retirement and allowed her to continue in service until a special board can be conducted for promotion.

Advocate Archana Pathak Dave mentioned this before a bench led by Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud seeking an urgent hearing of women Army officials.

The top court assured her to list the matter soon for hearing.

Advocate Archana Pathak Dave apprised the court that the woman applicant is a serving colonel in the Indian Army with unblemished service.

The officer is due for retirement on July 31, 2023, having attained the age of 54 years.

The applicant-officer is seeking the court's indulgence to allow her to continue in the same appointment to enable her to earn her first ACR in the rank of Colonel which is due on September 30, 2023.

In case the officer retires, she will not be able to earn her ACR on the due date as she is presently deficit of 32 days to earn her ACR, the lawyer said.

She further added that the ACR is required as a part of the criteria for consideration for the special board 2 (Brigadier).

The applicant urged for the stay of her retirement and prays to be allowed to continue in service until her special board 2 can be conducted for which she was not considered eligible due to non-compliance with the order of the high court of Delhi dated March 12, 2010 by the respondents.

Due to non-consideration of the Applicant, her fundamental rights have been violated, the advocate said. -- ANI

-------------------------------------------

Hum special hain ji..
 

Articles

Top