A line drawing of the proposed LR-SAM (courtesy LiveFist blog)
By Ajai Shukla
Missile Complex, Hyderabad
When the Akash surface-to-air missile (SAM)
enters service with the Indian Air Force (IAF) this month, it will have taken
30 years for the missile to have been developed and built. Shaken by this delay
the navy and the IAF have sponsored a new development model for their
next-generation missiles, which will see the Defence R&D Organisation
(DRDO) moving away from indigenous technology development, and operating
instead as a project manager. Effectively, the DRDO has been handed the
coordination role that was traditionally played by the defence ministry (MoD)
Senior DRDO managers who briefed Business
Standard during an exclusive visit to its missile laboratories in Hyderabad
said that that DRDO has been handed control of the budget for the IAF’s
futuristic Medium Range Surface to Air Missile (MR-SAM); and the navy’s
advanced Long Range Surface to Air Missile (LR-SAM). This amounts to Rs 10,075
crore for the MR-SAM, and Rs 2,606 crore for the LR-SAM.
From this budget, DRDO has signed
technology development contracts with Israeli companies, especially Israel
Aerospace Industries (IAI), for many of the new systems that will power these
SAMs. The DRDO, too, will develop certain sub-systems, but its key
responsibilities are: technology coordination; involving manufacturing partners
from Indian industry so that manufacture can begin without delay; putting in
place key infrastructure; and working out the users’ requirements of spares and
logistics systems so that manufacturing orders can be place holistically.
The DRDO has often complained that
excellent systems built by it have been devalued by poor production, notably
the Arjun tank, which is built by the Ordnance Factory Board at Avadi, Chennai.
“For the first time in a major programme,
the DRDO will be involved in production of newly-developed systems. We will
factor in the production phase right from the beginning, looking at the
facilities required on the IAF bases where the missiles will be deployed, the
maintenance requirement, the spares management, etc. We will calculate the
entire life-time requirement right from the beginning, so that we can take
consolidated figures to the sub-contractors, who can then gear up for the
production,” says Subir Kumar Chaudhary, who is managing the MR-SAM programme.
This model was proposed by the military,
especially the navy, which wants the LR-SAM for its four new Kolkata-class
destroyers, seven proposed Project 17A frigates, and the Indigenous Aircraft
Carrier (IAC), which is being built in Cochin Shipyard. Many current warships
are protected by the Israeli Barak missile, which has a range of just 10-15
kilometres and can shoot down only the current generation of anti-ship missiles,
like the Harpoon and the Exocet. The LR-SAM has a range of 70 kilometres,
according to scientists from the Defence R&D Laboratory (DRDL), who are
developing the missile, and will be manoeuvrable enough to shoot down the next
generation of anti-ship missiles.
Senior naval officers told Business
Standard anonymously that, rather than risk lengthy developmental delays by
going it alone, as the DRDO did in the Akash project, it was prudent to back a
joint developmental project with Israel, cutting down developmental risk. Such
a joint model was not possible when the Akash was being developed, because of
tight international sanctions.
Like the navy with the LR-SAM project, the
IAF backed the MR-SAM project with funding. “The IAF has funded 90 per cent of
the project, while 10 per cent is funded by the DRDO for the development phase
of the MR-SAM,” says Chaudhary.
Ironically, joint development with Israeli
companies has not eliminated delay. The LR-SAM, which began development in Jan
2006, was to be delivered to the navy in Oct 2012. But the first LR-SAMs will
not be delivered before early 2014. Meanwhile, three Kolkata-class warships
that were to be fitted with them are held up, incomplete in Mazagon Dock Ltd,
Mumbai (MDL). The shipyard is hoping for launchers (without missiles) to be
delivered soon, so that construction can continue. The missiles could be
delivered subsequently, even after the Kolkata-class destroyers enter service
with the navy.
The IAF is funding a far more expansive
contract for the MR-SAM. Signed in March 2009, the contract is for 18 fire
units (each equipped with 24 missiles) that must be delivered by October 2016.
Each fire unit comes with a radar, three missile launchers, and a sophisticated
Combat Management System. Since a missile has a limited shelf life, additional
orders for missiles will continue to be placed as they are consumed.
The MR-SAM uses the same missile as the
LR-SAM, with a range of 70 kilometres, to protect its air bases. The ground
infrastructure, however, is far more complex. The Akash missile, which is
currently entering service to protect IAF bases, has a range of 25-30
kilometres.
How the MOD became so smart.
ReplyDeleteWe would not have known which was the front section and which the rear section had it not been helpfully pointed out on the drawing ! :) :)
ReplyDeleteSuper Excellent series of Articles as usual. Though I have two questions:-
ReplyDelete1. The contribution of DRDO in LRSAM & MRSAM is practically nil as radars & seekers constitute almost 90% of the system which will be Israeli. (??)
2. Second I think that a TATA company will produce these missiles, I wonder if you can give us more info about it??