The moment. The C-17 lands at Hindan
By Ajai
Shukla
A shorter version was in Business Standard, 19th Jun 13
India’s
ability to defend the 3,500 kilometre Sino-India border got a boost today with
the arrival of its first Boeing C-17 Globemaster III, widely regarded as the
world’s most sophisticated, capable and expensive heavy-lift transport
aircraft.
The Indian
Air Force (IAF) has contracted for ten C-17 airlifters for Rs 22,800 crore
($4.12 billion), which will make the IAF the largest C-17 operator other than
the US Air Force which operates 224 of these airlifters. Boeing is required to deliver
the first five C-17s this year, and the remaining five in 2014.
The IAF is
pushing for an additional six C-17s, which would provide a lifeline to the C-17
production line at Long Beach, California, which creates some 5000 jobs
at Long Beach and another 17,000 elsewhere in the US. According to current
plans that line will be shut down by end-2014 after building India’s ten C-17s
and the US Air Force’s last seven aircraft.
As of now,
the IAF has until the end of 2013 to place the order, failing which the line
will shut down.
“As of now, India would need to take a decision on
additional C-17s by the third quarter of next year. There are other countries
that are expressing interest in the C-17. If they place an order, India’s
deadline would extend,” said Mark Kronenberg, Boeing’s International Business
Development chief, to Business Standard last August during the “major join”
ceremony of the IAF’s first C-17 at Long Beach.
The new
C-17 squadron --- which the IAF has numbered 81 Squadron --- is based at Hindan,
near Delhi. Ten flight crews --- each consisting of two pilots and a
loadmaster --- are undergoing training at a US Air Force base in Altus,
Oklahoma.
The uniquely
capable aircraft, which can land and take off with a load of 74 tonnes from a
one-kilometre-long stretch of hard unpaved mud, will allow the army to swiftly
reinforce threatened sectors along the remote, Himalayan, northern border. In
case of a threat to a particular sector, say Daulat Beg Oldi, the C-17 will
allow troops, ammunition and equipment to be quickly built up there.
In Oct 1962, with the China war imminent, the IAF had
airlifted AMX-13 light tanks to Ladakh, which were played a crucial role in the
battles around Chushul.
The C-17 will replace the obsolescent Russian IL-76
airlifter, which has served the IAF since the early 1980s but is now
unreliable. The IAF is impressed with the C-17’s abilities, especially after the
performance it demonstrated on 20th June 2010, during trials in
Ladakh. In the oxygen-thin air of that hot summer day, the IL-76 was unable to
land even without a payload. The C-17, however, landed and took off with 30
tonnes on board.
The C-17
can also carry 134 fully equipped paratroopers over a distance of 10,000
kilometres, allowing the IAF to launch paratroopers anywhere in Asia, most of
Europe and Africa, and even parts of Australia.
The MoD
stated today: “The [C-17] aircraft will enhance the operational potential of
the IAF with its payload carriage and performance capability and would augment
the strategic reach of the Nation during disaster relief or any similar
mission.”
A feature of the IAF’s C-17 purchase is a “performance based
logistics” contract that has been signed with Boeing. This binds Boeing to
ensure that some 85% of the C-17 fleet is always available and ready for
operations. Boeing will position spares and maintenance personnel for this,
drawing not just on depots in the US, but on a “virtual fleet” that includes
the six other forces that operate the C-17.
Doubt if the c17 can land At DBO as a regular airlift effort. Rarified air has huge limitations on aircraft capabilities. The C130s are probably better suited.
ReplyDeleteA C-17 landed in India? From America? BUY F-35!
ReplyDeleteYou get what you pay for. This holds true in this case too. Sure this aircraft is expensive, but it's also capable of carrying an Arjun MBT, while IL-76 is not. The delivery of this aircraft is on-time, while our other suppliers are always playing with their calendars. The cost written at the contract is what we pay, we know what happend with our other suppliers. Sometimes, paying more upfront is probably a better way forward.
ReplyDeleteIts so wrong to say unreliable IL-76 when comparing them to these modern American planes which did not even exist when the IL-76 was already in use by our IAF.
ReplyDeleteIL-76 have been our mainstay for decades now & have served us well at a fraction of the cost of these American toys.
"With a payload of 164,900 pounds, the C-17 can
ReplyDeletetake off from a 7,000
-foot airfield, fly
2,400 nautical miles, and land on a
small, austere airfield of 3,000 feet or less."
Sir - what is the possibility of C-17 landing in DBO/Chushul or any other ALG in Assam & Arunachal?
ReplyDelete