The MoD must step forward and actually make policy rather than sit in the shadows and decided who was to blame for the failure
by Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 12th Nov 13
When it
comes to explaining why the military still makes do with substandard equipment
even though India remains the world’s largest defence importer, we have a handy
whipping boy. Rather than confronting the complex planning, policy and
structural issues that block indigenous weaponry, we just aim a kick at the Defence
Research & Development Organisation, or DRDO.
This was
evident on November 6, when the parliamentary consultative committee on defence
was, according to a ministry of defence release, “bitterly critical of delays
in the development of (the Arjun) Main Battle Tank, (the Tejas) LCA and the
Kaveri Engine.” The members of Parliament warned the DRDO “to plan its projects
keeping in mind the futuristic security needs of the country and deliver on
time.”
Defence
Minister AK Antony, probably relieved to find the Committee’s ire being vented elsewhere,
quickly landed a blow of his own, sternly ordering the DRDO to focus on
“high-end research, particularly in critical and strategic areas.”
While the
DRDO must indeed deliver on time and within budget, this cavalier dismissal of
India’s most fundamental defence problem --- the equipping of our forces --- highlights
the simplistic understanding of military matters even within government and
parliament. Surely nobody actually believes that the DRDO functions
autonomously, choosing its own development projects, setting equipment
specifications, naming the figure it needs, and developing and manufacturing the
final product in bulk for the users.
In fact,
the DRDO can only be allocated funds for a development project once the user
service gives its okay, and there is a consultative mechanism for this called
the Services Interaction Group. The DRDO has its own budget, which is Rs 10,600
crore for this year, about 5 per cent of the defence budget. This is equally
divided between revenue expenditure, which pays for 30,000 employees (5,000 are
scientists) and 52 laboratories, test facilities and firing ranges; and its
capital expenditure, which pays for R&D. Without user backing, the DRDO
would have to pay for a development project from its own capital budget.
For years, the
DRDO could veto the import of equipment that it believed could be developed in
India, but this is no longer so. Today, the DRDO readily agrees to any import
request from the military. With 532 projects currently on hand --- including “mission
mode” projects like a tank engine, technology demonstrators like a hypersonic
vehicle, life science projects like food for soldiers in Siachen, and a range
of weapons platforms like missiles --- the DRDO is already swamped with work.
If the defence
ministry was really planning, India’s increasingly capable private sector would
take on many of these projects, freeing the DRDO for “high-end” design work
that others cannot handle. Unfortunately, the MoD has failed to create the frameworks
needed to attract private companies into this realm. Instead, the ministry’s unabashed
preference for its eight defence public sector undertakings (DPSUs) and 42
ordnance factories (OFs) has prevented the creation of a level playing field.
The private sector, which faces discrimination in bidding, in taxation regimes,
in the absence of assured orders and in hedging against exchange rate
variations, finds the risk unmanageable. With the private sector unwilling to
fill this space, the DRDO can hardly scorn high-altitude rations, iron-reduction
technologies for drinking water and the gene sequencing of mosquitos for
developing anti-malaria remedies. For the soldier on the front lines, these
“low-tech” products are everyday essentials.
The defence ministry has
also failed in co-opting the private sector into developing high-tech, complex
systems like combat vehicles and digital communications systems, which are well
within its capabilities. The “Make” procedure was formulated to bring private
sector consortia into building these systems. Top defence ministry officials announced 18
months ago that at least 150-180 “Make” projects would be quickly sanctioned.
Yet, not a single “Make” project has been contracted.
The
military would prefer import, since it is used to dependency. Besides, cost
savings by a service do not automatically translate into more funds for other
expenditures --- there is no incentive to cut costs by indigenising. But import
carries what defence technologist-strategist V Siddhartha calls the “triple
trap”. In other words, technology or equipment developed abroad will seldom suit
Indian requirements; what is suitable will be denied; what is not denied will
be unaffordable.
Much
criticism of DRDO arises because equipment it designs, such as the Arjun tank, often
has serious quality issues when it reaches the users in combat units. Critics
of the tank concede its first-rate design, but point to sloppy manufacture. Despite
the DRDO’s stated wish to choose its manufacturing partner, the defence ministry insists on funnelling
production to DPSUs/OFs, over whose notoriously sub-standard manufacturing the
DRDO has no control. There are few complaints about DRDO equipment built by
private vendors, e.g. the Pinaka multi-barrelled rocket launcher, which Tata
Power SED and Larsen & Toubro build.
A thinking defence ministry would be helping the private sector de-risk its entry into defence
manufacture. Risks that arise from the limited numbers and irregular nature of
defence orders could be easily managed by allowing production by private
companies in government-owned-contractor-operated (GOCO) facilities. The DRDO
is already working with medium scale private sector companies, doing limited-series
production of items in GOCO facilities.
For two
decades, defence production policy has remained a mere slogan: our ratio of 70
per cent imported and 30 per cent indigenous weaponry must be reversed! It is
time for the defence ministry to step forward and actually make policy rather than sit in
the shadows and decided who was to blame for the failure.
Wow, what a steadfast support for the incompetence of DRDO, earlier it was for HAL - no matter that in the end both these organisations need to be made accountable for thier sloppiness and sub-standard work.
ReplyDeleteYou really are an example of how friends should be, especially ones with their own axe to grind.
part issue... DRDO culture... turf wars... within... outside agencies... ministry... forces... culture of non-inclusiveness... The Nation... not just DRDO... for Nation... We The Nation...
ReplyDeleteThere is a need for much greater involvement from the users. Starting with identifying the future need and giving mid-course correction. Our Army still has Grenade HE 36, which is obsolete almost in all modern armies.
ReplyDeletewell penned Col. Shukla, not to mention the ambiguous TPCR which looks more like a child's wish list than a serious planning document. trust between pvt sector and MoD contracting authority can be bridged by DRDO subcontracting more and engaging in Tier-1-4 workshare. one must fundamentally, also, reconceptualize the idea of indigenisation. it is not to be a 100% autarkik system, but rather a domestically controlled supply chain that engages international and domestic production and development partners. again, pointing to MoD's reticence to allow this kind of policy to thrive is its old cold-war mentality and pursuit of non-alignment. of course several memories burn bright of international assistance being denied or transfer being denied, but it is all the more critical then that DRDO maintain a strict IP protection environment to ensure private sector interest in transferring sensitive technologies.
ReplyDeleteBut sir MOD preference shows when it likes the extra 'R' in the TAT(R)A trucks.
ReplyDeleteWho wants to disturb that gravy (read slush money) train ? Perhaps only patriotic fools like Gen. V.K. Singh who are then conveniently eased out !
The problem is that many untrained military people treat the DRDO as if it is a cobbler or tailor - order shoes and clothes as you want, and treat the creator with contempt. The military - usually NDA-trained generalists - don't understand how to interact with creative, research scientists. On the other side, many DRDO types need to spend three months inside a tank in the Rajasthan desert to understand that the end-user will not be sitting in a laboratory with the final product. Both sides need to interact with each other much more.
ReplyDeleteWhy must we develop the Arjun tank or the LCA from scratch. Why must the DRDO do this? The HVF, Avadi which has received ToT for T-72 and T-90 should be tasked to use that as starting point and develop a state-of-the-art tank. Similarly, HAL which has received ToT for Mirage 2000, jaguar, and all the MIG series should be tasked to develop a state-of-the-art combat aircraft.
ReplyDeleteAll PSUs / industry receiving technologies should be made accountable.
DRDO should only carry out research in Greenfield technologies.