By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard Weekend Supplement
1st Sept 2012
Gushing out of the earth through narrow
pipelines, oil is fated also to travel to its consumers through narrow
bottlenecks. The Strait of Hormuz, just 34 kilometres wide, is the Persian Gulf
exit through which supertankers haul away some 17 million barrels of oil daily.
Five thousand kilometres later, at the doorstep of the oil guzzling economies
of China, Japan and Indonesia, these giant vessels squeeze through the Malacca
Strait, just 3 kilometres wide, leaving behind the Indian Ocean and entering
the Pacific.
Global security managers lavish attention
on the security of these two bottlenecks, but remain sanguine about the vast
expanse of water that connect them: the Arabian Sea, the Bay of Bengal and the
Andaman Sea at the mouth of the Malacca Strait. But this stretch is the
bailiwick of the Indian Navy, the only major navy that operates between Qatar
--- the forward headquarters of the United States Central Command (CENTCOM) ---
and the contested and militarised waters of the South China Sea, beyond the
Malacca Strait.
Besides keeping a watchful eye over the
international shipping lanes that run through the northern Indian Ocean, the
Indian Navy is also the gatekeeper of two more choke points near its offshore
island chains of Lakshadweep and the Andamans. All Pacific-bound shipping from
the Persian Gulf, or the Red Sea, converges on a 200 kilometres wide funnel
called the Nine Degree Channel (named after its latitude) that is straddled by
India’s Lakshadweep island chain. Given these islands’ strategic control over
the shipping lanes, the Kochi-based South-Western Naval Command established a
naval base on Lakshadweep in April this year.
Patrol vessels, aircraft and radars on this
base, INS Dweeprakshak (INS stands for Indian Naval Ship, a confusing
appellation, since the navy uses it for ships as well as shore bases), plays
guardian angel to merchant shipping on the international shipping lane (ISL)
that runs through the Ten Degree Channel. The navy seeks no compensation for
keeping pirates at bay, or responding to emergencies. This comes with the turf
for a regional power’s navy. And, in the event of a crisis, this positions the
navy well for closing the channel to unfriendly shipping, or “enforcing a
blockade” in military parlance.
In the Bay of Bengal, twelve hundred
kilometres from the Indian mainland, sits another strategically priceless
island chain called the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. These too dominate the
international shipping lane that runs past them, through the 200-kilometre wide
Six Degree Channel, before entering the Malacca Strait. Over the last two
decades, India has transformed the Andamans (as the island chain is called)
from a military backwater into the bristling Andaman & Nicobar Command (ANC).
This expanding presence, with a growing complement of naval, air and ground
assets, is India’s first (and only) tri-service command, headed in rotation by
three-star generals, admirals and air marshals, who report directly to the
Integrated Defence Staff in New Delhi.
According to a recently retired navy fleet
commander who spoke on the condition of anonymity, the Lakshadweep and Andamans
give India a double stranglehold over these international shipping lanes, make
it the natural master of the northern Indian Ocean. Iran’s bluster about
shutting down the Strait of Hormuz can evoke scepticism, but analysts agree
that the Indian Navy --- with its flotilla of 134 modern warships --- can shut
down the Indian Ocean shipping lanes whenever it chooses. At stake here are not
just the oil supplies of China, Japan and the ASEAN states, but also the
reverse flow of exports that are crucial to these economies. All told, some
60,000 vessels move through the Strait of Malacca each year, one every nine
minutes.
“A couple of submarines and a fighter
squadron at Car Nicobar could easily enforce a declared blockade,” says the
retired fleet commander.
Last fortnight, this capability was
strengthened when India’s just-retired naval chief, Admiral Nirmal Verma (he
handed charge on Friday to Admiral DK Joshi), inaugurated a naval air base, INS
Baaz, at the very mouth of the Malacca Strait. This base, which will eventually
have a 10,000-foot-long runway for fighter operations, is 300 kilometres closer
to the Malacca Strait than Car Nicobar,.
Noted geo-strategist, Robert Kaplan, notes
India’s crucial geography in this area: “India stands astride the Indian Ocean…
the world’s energy interstate, the link for megaships carrying hydrocarbons
from the Middle East to the consumers in the burgeoning middle-class
concentrations of East Asia. India, thus, with the help of the Indian Ocean,
fuses the geopolitics of the Greater Middle East with the geopolitics of East
Asia — creating an increasingly unified and organic geography of conflict and
competition across the navigable southern rim of Eurasia.”
But New Delhi does not intend this ocean to
be a hotly contested strategic prize. Instead, oil and merchandise must flow
smoothly, crucial for its growing economy. But the Indian Navy’s level
statements and its rapid growth also indicate that India plans to retain local
superiority over its Chinese counterpart, the People’s Liberation Army (Navy),
which would allow it to counter any Chinese aggression on the Himalayan
frontier with a blockade of Chinese shipping in the Indian Ocean.
The growth of the PLA(N) can hardly be
matched from within the resources of the smaller Indian economy. But New Delhi
believes that the PLA(N) will be increasingly preoccupied with the growing
regional presence of the US Navy that is presaged by the “rebalance to the Asia
Pacific region” that President Barack Obama announced earlier this year. While
Obama specifically named India as a key regional partner, New Delhi has chosen
a more balanced role, which would not commit India to taking sides in any
confrontation.
Admiral Verma declared in New Delhi in
August that, notwithstanding “major policy statements from the US, from our
perspective the primary areas of interest to us is from the Malacca Strait to
the (Persian/Arabian) Gulf in the west, and to the Cape of Good Hope in the
south… the Pacific and the South China Sea are of concern to us, but activation
in those areas is not on the cards.”
India’s quiet assumption of primacy in the
Indian Ocean does not go unchallenged by regional rivals. Chinese leaders,
dating back to Defence Minister Chi Haotian in 1994, have protested that, “The
Indian Ocean is not India’s ocean.” But the fundamental determinants of naval
power --- force levels and proximity --- suggest that China is some way from
being able to challenge India in its own oceanic backyard.
Senior government sources say that the navy
is being careful that its new teeth and claws do not set off alarm bells
anywhere. In the 1980s, India’s acquisition of a flurry of Soviet Union
warships caused regional countries like Australia and Indonesia to openly
question the reason for that naval build-up. This time around, there is
painstaking transparency; the navy publicly bean counts all its recent and
forthcoming acquisitions.
This was evident at Admiral Verma’s
farewell press conference last month. He listed out the recently inducted
warships that had taken the navy’s count to 134: three Project 17 stealth
frigates (INS Shivalik, Satpura and Sahyadri); two fleet tankers (INS Deepak
and Shakti); one Russian 1135.6 Class stealth frigate (INS Teg); the nuclear
attack submarine, INS Chakra, which has been leased from Russia; a sail
training ship (INS Sudarshini); and eight water-jet Fast Attack Craft.
Another 43 warships, revealed Verma, were
under construction in India. These include three Project 15A destroyers (INS
Kolkata, Kochi and Chennai), being built by Mazagon Dock Ltd, Mumbai (MDL),
which would start induction next year; four more similar destroyers under
Project 15B; six Scorpene submarines being built at MDL; four anti-submarine
warfare corvettes, being built at Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers,
Kolkata (GRSE), which would start entering service next year; four offshore
patrol vessels (OPVs) being built by Goa Shipyard Limited (GSL) would commence
induction later this year; five more OPVs and two cadet training ships are
being built by private shipyards. Eight landing craft are being built by GRSE
for the Andamans; six new catamaran-hulled survey vessels, the first of which
will join the navy this year.
Also joining the navy would be three more
warships from Russia: the aircraft carrier, INS Vikramaditya (formerly the
Gorshkov) would enter service this year; and two more frigates of the Teg class
would join the navy’s fleet in 2013-14. All this would ensure that “over the
next five years we expect to induct ships and submarines at an average rate of
5 platforms per year, provided the yards deliver as per contracted timelines,”
said Verma.
All this is still insufficient to meet the
navy’s Maritime Capability Perspective Plan (MCPP) target of a 160-ship force
that is built around 90 capital warships, like aircraft carriers, destroyers,
frigates and corvettes. Today the navy has barely half the destroyers and frigates
it needs. And the 5 vessels that will be inducted each year will barely suffice
to replace warships that are decommissioned after completing their 30-40 year
service lives.
“Looking just at numbers conveys an
over-gloomy picture,” a highly placed MoD source tells Business Standard.
“Replacing a single-role frigate built in the 1960s or 1970s with a multi-role,
stealth frigate that we build today is hardly a one-for-one transaction. It
represents a significant accretion of capability. And so, we are looking at
capabilities, not just at numbers.”
But numbers are important, especially when
it comes to covering a vast maritime domain. In anti-piracy operations around
the Gulf of Aden, where Indian, Chinese and Japanese warships conduct patrols
in coordination with one another, India has managed to sustain a single warship
on patrol. China, in contrast, sustains three, including a logistics
replenishment vessel. India scrapes the bottom of its 134-ship barrel to muster
warships for the range of exercises it conducts with the US, Russia, UK, France
and Singapore, amongst others. The PLA(N)’s armada of more than 500 warships
allows it to send vessels on lengthy deployments, such as port calls to eastern
and southern African countries that front the Indian Ocean.
Realising that defence shipyards alone
cannot bridge the navy’s shortfall, the MoD has encouraged shipyards like MDL
and GRSE to forge joint ventures (JVs) with private shipyards that have created
impressive infrastructure for building warships. These include L&T’s brand
new Katupalli shipyard at Ennore, Tamil Nadu; Pipavav Defence and Offshore
Engineering Co Ltd at Bhavnagar, Gujarat; and ABG Shipyard at Dahej, Gujarat.
The JVs seek to marry the experience of defence shipyards with the
infrastructure and entrepreneurial ability of the private sector shipyards.
Several western navies, like the UK’s Royal
Navy, make up for smaller numbers by functioning in alliances, which has
allowed them to concentrate on particular types of vessels (the Royal Navy focuses
on anti-submarine warfare) while other partners handle other operational
dimensions. With the Indian Navy determined to stay clear of alliances (“we can
be a partner, but not an ally,” says a senior officer) it will be forced to
find a way of putting in place the flotilla needed for policing the ocean that
India increasingly considers its own.
* * * * *
AN EXPANDING FORCE
Indian Navy force multipliers
1. Sea
Control
Aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya, formerly the Gorshkov, will be delivered this year. Like India’s existing carrier, the INS Viraat, this floating airfield will allow the navy to impose control over a large expanse of sea, a long distance away from land bases.
Aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya, formerly the Gorshkov, will be delivered this year. Like India’s existing carrier, the INS Viraat, this floating airfield will allow the navy to impose control over a large expanse of sea, a long distance away from land bases.
2. Strategic
Bases
Far-flung bases like Car Nicobar and Campbell Bay in the Andamans (pictured here), which function like unsinkable aircraft carriers, allow air power to be applied at locations very far away from the mainland. The Andaman & Nicobar Islands are 1200 km away from the mainland.
Far-flung bases like Car Nicobar and Campbell Bay in the Andamans (pictured here), which function like unsinkable aircraft carriers, allow air power to be applied at locations very far away from the mainland. The Andaman & Nicobar Islands are 1200 km away from the mainland.
3. Blockade of Shipping
The nuclear attack submarine INS Chakra, along with 14 existing submarines and 6 Scorpenes that will come by 2018, can impose a blockade on shipping at choke points in the Indian Ocean. These include the Strait of Hormuz; Nine Degree Channel; Six Degree Channel; Malacca Strait.
The nuclear attack submarine INS Chakra, along with 14 existing submarines and 6 Scorpenes that will come by 2018, can impose a blockade on shipping at choke points in the Indian Ocean. These include the Strait of Hormuz; Nine Degree Channel; Six Degree Channel; Malacca Strait.
4. Maritime
Domain Awareness
Reconnaissance aircraft like the P8I (India has bought 8, the first of which will join the navy next year) will allow it to effectively monitor oceanic areas. India is also scouting around for 8 medium range maritime reconnaissance aircraft.
Reconnaissance aircraft like the P8I (India has bought 8, the first of which will join the navy next year) will allow it to effectively monitor oceanic areas. India is also scouting around for 8 medium range maritime reconnaissance aircraft.
5. Land
Attack
The Brahmos cruise missile, which is now standard fitment on all naval warships, provide a potent capability to attack targets that are 200-250 kilometres inland.
The Brahmos cruise missile, which is now standard fitment on all naval warships, provide a potent capability to attack targets that are 200-250 kilometres inland.
India has still more to do. Due to delay in induction of indigenous aircraft carrier, project 75i subs, we are on backfoot.
ReplyDeleteWe wish to... take the example of... Indian navy's submarine wing... and its state of affairs...
ReplyDeleteBring the private players, set up one against the other(both public and private) and ask them to compete against each other for a particular type of warships, with the winning design getting 60% of the number and the loser, the rest 40%. Set up predefined time limits, employ business school graduates and experienced MBA's to manage the project, and do a monthly review of laid down deliverables to the achieved deliverables and place accountabilities and checks to avoid further delay.....So 2 shipyards dedicated to corvettes, 2 shipyards for destroyers, 2 for frigates, 2 for nuclear submarines, 2 for diesel submarines, 2 for aircraft carriers and 2 for rest. Increase the number of shipyards by inviting private bodies like Tata and Reliance and promising them that each will have sufficient orders....And last but not the least, employ the latest methods of warship building like modularconstruction.
ReplyDeleteFollow the same logic for Airforce and Army and see where we reach by 2025. Should have been done long ago but better late than never...
This all sounds more like wishful thinking than anything else. The important thing missing in India are not powerful ships or bases etc. but a sound and forceful foreign policy. But the government is too involved and muddled in daily political scandals and corruption to formulate one. We are still far away from being a really big player in a new Great Game.
ReplyDeleteIt is desirable to be a partner of USA in the pacific only. Then see...
ReplyDelete@Rahul Samanta: Most western countries don't have DRDOs, hence their reliance on university research and private producers. You may argue that privatizing of defence production leads to more efficiency but, frankly, given the recent scandalous revelations about private sector corruption worldwide, no one has much trust in them either. The legends of $200 ashtrays in the Pentagon are evidence of a very bloated private sector feeding off the teats of the military-industrial state. In any case, western defence manufacturers are struggling because their own governments have cut back on orders. Hence their rush to sell to the "developing" world, because otherwise they would all be bust. O
ReplyDeleteCol Ajai Shukla - didn't expect this error from you - Kochi houses the Southern Naval Command, not the South-Western Naval Command as you have written. The Navy doesn't have anything like that at all anyway. Interesting write up, nonetheless.
ReplyDeleteSir, you've made a mistake. 10 degree channel is straddled by Andaman and Nicobar islands and not Lakshadweep, isn't it. And the first of C 130J Super Hercules recently landed in Car Nicobar island
ReplyDeleteAjai - Love to read your blog everyday.
ReplyDeleteI have been saying this for a while but no one seems to want to listen. The next war will not be fought over oil, but it will be over water.
People can live without oil, but not water.
Good book to read -fictional book called The Storm by Clive Cussler.
Since India is the only country where there is natural rain coming down, it will be rich very soon. If you look at global warming trends, US is already in 70-80% drought. Russia/Canada are also in the same boat. This means that very few countries will be able to feed the world.
So Naval power is very crucial for India, nuclear based is better. We need to open up the private ship yards and allow them to build more. look at China, they produce more ships at crazier rate than we do......