25 capital warships commissioned since 1997, such as INS Shivalik, lack towed array sonars essential in the shallow Arabian Sea waters
By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 16th May 14
At the
start of this year, INS Vikramaditya, the navy’s brand new aircraft carrier,
sailed into the Arabian Sea near the end of a non-stop, 15,000-kilometre voyage
from Russia. Accompanied till the Mediterranean by a single Talwar-class
frigate, the Vikramaditya was joined by an armada of Indian warships for the
last leg of its journey. This was not celebration, but operational safety. With
the navy’s best warships worryingly incapable of detecting modern submarines,
such as Pakistan’s Agosta 90B, the flotilla was tasked to bring Vikramaditya
safely home.
The reason
for this blindness to submarines: the ministry of defence (MoD) has steadfastly
blocked the import of an Advanced Towed Array Sonar (ATAS), a sensor crucial
for detecting submarines in warm, shallow waters like those of the Arabian Sea.
Without ATAS, India’s most advanced warships --- including 25 destroyers,
frigates and corvettes built and bought since 1997 --- would be sitting ducks
in any future war. Enemy submarines, lurking undetected, can pick off Indian
warships with heavy torpedoes from 50-80 kilometres away.
The import
of ATAS was blocked since the mid-1990s because the Defence R&D
Organisation (DRDO) was developing an indigenous ATAS called Nagan. In 2012,
the Nagan project was officially shut down and the DRDO began work on another
system called ALTAS. This has not been operationalized either.
Meanwhile,
two generations of otherwise capable warships sail with an empty space where
ATAS will be fitted some day. Until then, these vessels have only limited sonar
capability, provided by a relatively ineffective Passive Towed Array Sonar
(PTAS), and a hull-mounted sonar called HUMSA.
The warships
without ATAS include three Delhi-class destroyers (INS Delhi, Mumbai and
Mysore); three Brahmaputra class frigates (INS Brahmaputra, Betwa and Beas);
six Talwar class frigates; and three Shivalik class frigates (INS Shivalik,
Satpura and Sahyadri). Ten more warships are currently being built without ATAS
--- four Kamorta class corvettes (INS Kamorta, Kadmatt, Kiltan and Kavaratti);
and three Kolkata class destroyers (INS Kolkata, Kochi and Chennai).
In 2009, responding
to a furious navy, the MoD consented to import six ATAS for some Rs 300 crore.
A German company, Atlas Elektronik GmbH, won the tender but the contract was
stalled by predictable complaints of wrongdoing. After the MoD found four successive
complaints baseless, the ministry’s independent monitors committee examined the
allegations in March. No wrongdoing was found and the committee suggested the
purchase be expedited. Yet, Defence Minister AK Antony continues to stonewall.
A serving
admiral told Business Standard tersely: “The MoD is endangering warships worth
several thousand crore each, and the lives of several hundred crewmen, by
blocking the import of ATAS that costs just Rs 50 crore each.”
ATAS is especially
vital for our neighbourhood. Warships detect underwater objects (like submarines)
with sonar --- a “ping” of sound emitted into the water that reflects back from
submarines, just as radar bounces back from aircraft. In our waters, however, that
signal often gets lost. Our warm climes cause a sharp “temperature gradient”, with
warm water on the surface that cools rapidly as one goes deeper. These water
layers at different temperatures refract (bend) sonar waves, often deflecting
them altogether from the warship’s sensors. With the returning sound signal
lost, the warship cannot detect the submarine.
To overcome
this, an ATAS is towed by the warship with a cable, extending deep below the
surface, into the cooler layers where submarines lurk. With the ATAS positioned
in the colder water layers, there is no “temperature differential”. Even the faintest
return signal from a submarine is detected.
PTAS, unlike
ATAS, does not actively “ping”. It can only detect a submarine that is emitting
sound. Since submarines on patrol are deliberately silent, they emit no sound
for a PTAS to detect.
While the
Arabian Sea offers tricky, shallow-water operating conditions, the Bay of
Bengal is much deeper. Thirty kilometres off Karachi, the ocean floor is just
40 metres deep; while 5 kilometres off Visakhapatnam, the depth is 3,000
metres. The Arabian Sea, therefore, is the playground of small conventional
submarines.
Simultaneously,
the Bay of Bengal offers the deep diving conditions that favour nuclear
submarines, which are too large for shallow waters. That is why experts predict
India will operate both conventional and nuclear submarines --- conventional in
shallow water, and nuclear in deep water. Major navies tend to choose one or
the other; e.g. the US Navy operates only nuclear submarines.
In
servicing India’s need for high-end sonars, the winner of the ATAS tender would
grab in pole position. Already, Bharat Electronics Ltd (BEL) is building 10
ATAS in partnership with a foreign vendor, probably the winner of the ATAS
contract. Eighty advanced sonars could be tendered over the next three years.
Besides
submarines, sonars would be required for anti-submarine surface vessels.
Last month, the MoD tendered for 16 Anti Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft
(ASWC). Their critical sensor will be sophisticated sonar with an
electronically controlled beam that can flash in any direction.
Notwithstanding
the delay in ATAS, Atlas Elektronik is expected to perform strongly, given its
expertise in shallow water sonar. Through two world wars, German submarines
(called Unterseeboots, or U-boats) were feared for their sonars. During the
Cold War, German submarines operated from a short coastline along the Baltic
Sea, which was relatively shallow, like the Arabian Sea.
Neither the
MoD nor Atlas Electronik responded to an emailed request for comments for this article.
What to say?
ReplyDeleteThe MOD buggers are really burying the country.
I wish this AK Anthony to spending a painful painful agonizing time ahead for having making my dear armed forces fight blind.
Bloody Congress.Bloody Defence Minister. I Hope we can change some situation in next few years.
DRDO....cmon u should get the priorities right.
After more than 40 years of the INS khukri incident, the lesson has still not been learnt. Maybe it is the duty of another PNS Hangor to make the early decisions for ATAS. St.Anthony should be tried for treason. Was he taking govt. salary to sign deals or just to blacklist companies.
ReplyDeleteAjai, you have given a good technical description of the shallow sea-water sonar problems. Indeed an ATAS is needed. I wonder why DRDO cannot have a bunch of IIT or IISc profs/PhDs do a research study of Arabian sea around our coast line. I am sure Navy already might have the relevant research data (temperature gradient vs sound propagation profiles using string of controlled implosives) available for analysis. My guess DRDO lacks skills/ingenuity in testing and confidence in their designs for certifying them as battle-field "deployment" grade. Germany has learnt its lessons from 2 WWs to be able to design and certify with confidence its systems. How many such lessons has DRDO learnt? India needs intelligent Risk-takers and fearless adventurers to become self-reliant and future exporters of High-tech. Sitting with defensive posture will certainly not bring us Glory! Blood & Glory go together and not "Gandhi-waad" & Glory. Unfortunately our culture forbids precisely such dynamism and thus our sorry state of affairs. Maybe Modi might be such a dymanic leader after Indira Gandhi. The rest were/are competing for the title of Mahatama!
ReplyDeleteAjai please write some thing about the already delayed Arihant SSBN project, there are news that the reactor is Leakey, noisy and is vibrating beyond the limits?????
ReplyDeleteDid someone say one of our neighbouring countries was enemy numer 1
ReplyDeleteThe refusal to learn lessons from engagements in the distant and recent past is a hallmark of our ministry. There are essentially, two problems. One, the entire system of procurements is archaic and just too slow. Two, is obviously a complete and utter lack of knowledge of even a basic degree amongst defence ministry mandarins and ministers. Such a slow and imperfect system staffed by unresponsive and 'non' accountable people is the bane of our armed forces.
ReplyDeletejust waiting for the new Raksha Mantri to take over. Thank god the UPA were routed in the polls.
ReplyDeleteAnglo Saxon... HDW deal... Can't venture out... west coast... PNS will know from... million miles away...
ReplyDeleteSir,
ReplyDeleteIn post of induction of kolkata class Destroyer you had mentioned that the Nagan towed array sonar is going to be the towed array sonar. DRDO sonar are known for operating in Indian condition successfully.
Please shed some light on Nagan towed array status. In case of Mihir helo sonar DRDO has accepted it as being a technology demonstrator
What can be said!! AK Antony was so busy in pulling down the pyjama of Dr MM Singh that he hardly had time for anything else.
ReplyDeleteMoD Babus enjoyed all this time by making money. Whenever any issue cropped up, they solved it by opening a DPSU or a DRDO lab in Antony's backwaters in Kerala. Indian Navy became his personal boat service and its headquarters were de-facto shifted to Kerala.
If he had stayed for another five years, majority Indians would have migrated to safer countries.
Antony is going to be baptised into Saint by pope for having a squeaky clean spotless image. Job comes later.
ReplyDelete