The defence minister visiting the first Scorpene submarine being built at Mazagon Dock, Mumbai
By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 2nd Oct 2014
Naval warfare
experts agree the Indian Navy is capable of obtaining “sea control” --- or domination
of waters and airspace --- in the Arabian Sea in a war with Pakistan. Equally, India
can dominate China’s sea lines of communications (SLOCs) through the Indian
Ocean, cutting off trade, oil and commodities. This ability stems from India’s
aircraft carriers and the proximity to naval and air bases on Indian territory.
(See Part 1 of this series: “Indian navy:
strong on aircraft carriers, short of submarines”, September XX)
Yet a
bleaker picture emerges of the navy’s ability for “sea denial” --- bottling up enemy
shipping in a particular area; or blocking it from moving through a passage; or
preventing the enemy from using the seas freely. Submarines are vital for sea
denial, lurking unseen, menacing enemy shipping.
India’s fleet
of 14 submarines is too small to blockade Pakistani ports and interdicting its SLOCs
at the Strait of Hormuz and Gulf of Aden; while also blocking China’s navy ---
the People’s Liberation Army (Navy), or PLA(N) --- from crossing into the
Indian Ocean through the narrow straits that provide access from the South
China Sea. These include the Straits of Malacca, Sunda, Lombok and Ombei Wetar.
For all
this, India can muster just 8-9 submarines, given the on-going need for maintenance
and refit. Submarine availability was further damaged on Aug 14, 2013, when a
Kilo-class vessel, INS Sindhurakshak, blew up in unexplained blast in Mumbai. Another,
INS Sindhukirti, has been in refit since 2006 in Hindustan Shipyard,
Visakhapatnam.
Meanwhile,
even as India’s surface fleet grows, new submarines are not coming fast enough.
Six Scorpene submarines that Mazagon Dock Ltd, Mumbai (MDL) is building under
Project 75 will only roll out in the second half of this decade. Another six
submarines being acquired under Project 75I will join the fleet only in the
next decade. By then, today’s ten Kilo-class and four HDW submarines would
begin retiring, with many having exceeded 30 years of service. The fleet will
plateau at about 20 submarines, if more are not quickly bought or built.
In
contrast, the PLA(N) has 53 conventional submarines, the majority capable of firing
anti-ship cruise missiles, according to the latest estimate from the US Office
of Naval Intelligence (ONI). Furthermore, China is developing the new Type 095 submarine
that can also strike land targets. Meanwhile, its fleet of five nuclear attack
submarines (SSNs) is being expanded to 16-20 vessels.
Pakistan’s
submarine fleet is growing too. China is selling Islamabad six Type-041
Yuan-class submarines to supplement its five existing submarines, which include
three advanced Agosta 90B vessels, with air independent propulsion. AIP makes a
submarine more dangerous than the diesel-electric variety, which must “snorkel”
more often --- or come up to the surface to recharge its batteries. India will
get its first AIP submarines only in 2018-19, when the Scorpenes start being
built with this new-generation propulsion system.
New Delhi
worries about this imbalance. Naval planners remember a debacle in 1971, when
an otherwise outclassed Pakistan Navy sneaked in a submarine --- PNS Hangor ---
that sank an Indian warship, INS Khukri, killing almost 200 Indian sailors and
scoring an important moral victory.
Former navy
chief, Admiral Sureesh Mehta, points out that enemy submarine strength is not
countered by acquiring more of ones own. Instead, submarines are countered by
building anti-submarine warfare (ASW) capability --- which consists of
specialist vessels; ASW capability on regular warships and helicopters; and
maritime reconnaissance aircraft that can locate, pinpoint and destroy submarines.
Submarines,
when submerged, are detected mainly by sonar equipment. This emits sound waves
into water, and listens for reflections from the hull of any submarine in the
vicinity. Once located and identified as an enemy submarine, it is destroyed
with torpedoes or depth charges.
Here lies
the navy’s most critical vulnerability. As this newspaper first reported (“Warships in peril as defence ministry blocks
sonar purchase”, May 16, 2014) every Indian warship built since 1997 lacks
advanced towed array sonar, or ATAS, crucial for detecting enemy submarines in
the peculiar temperature and salinity gradients on our western seaboard. Since
the Defence R&D Organisation (DRDO) was developing an indigenous ATAS, the
defence ministry blocked its purchase from the international market. In the
absence of ATAS, undetected submarines can pick off Indian warships with heavy
torpedoes from 50-80 kilometres away.
On Aug 30, after
a firestorm of media criticism, the defence ministry cleared the procurement of
ATAS from the international market. Even so, the procurement process, supply
and fitment would take several years more.
Another
critical ASW vulnerability is the shortfall of multirole helicopters, which operate
from warships to detect enemy submarines with “dunking sonars” that the
helicopters lower into the sea. India has just a handful of these helicopters
in service, but the purchase of replacements has remained stalled for years. Last
month the defence ministry cleared an initial purchase, but the helicopters
will take years to materialise.
The only
bright spot in India’s ASW capability is the induction of state-of-the-art long-range
maritime patrol (LRMP) aircraft that are effective submarine hunters. India
will have eight Boeing P-8I LRMP aircraft (possibly 12 if an options clause is
exercised) bought from the US to supplement eight ageing Russian Tupolev-142s
(Pakistan uses the P3C Orion). LRMP aircraft patrol vast swathes of ocean,
dropping “sonobuoys” into the water where a submarine presence is suspected.
The sonobuoys detect submarine movements and relay its location to the LRMP
aircraft, which then destroys the submarine with depth charges or torpedoes.
Alternatively, it can direct a strike by another warship, submarine or
aircraft.
Submarine
experts like Rear Admiral Raja Menon (Retired) argue that India must develop
indigenous, nuclear-powered submarines (SSNs), which can remain submerged almost
indefinitely and, therefore, have longer mission endurance. India has already
overcome the major technology challenge --- i.e. miniaturising a nuclear
reactor --- while developing INS Arihant, the first of its planned fleet of six
nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines (SSBN).
To be sure,
the US Navy --- the world’s most advanced --- operates an all-nuclear submarine
fleet. Yet, India’s geographical and operational circumstances demand a mix of conventional
and nuclear submarines. The Bay of Bengal, on India’s eastern seaboard, has a
continental shelf that drops steeply from the coast, the deep water making it
suitable for operations by bulky SSNs, most of which displace 7,000-13,000
tonnes.
On the west
coast, the continental shelf tapers gradually into the Arabian Sea, with the
shallower water unsuitable for SSNs. Here, the smaller conventional submarines
--- India’s Kilo-class displaces 3,000 tonnes, and HDW submarines less than
2,000 tonnes --- can move more freely, especially in coastal waters. They are
also quieter than SSNs, making them suitable for sea denial.
This is not
to say that, SSNs cannot be employed in the Arabian Sea. Far out at sea, they
are ideal for protecting the flanks of a carrier battle group (CBG). They would
lurk at a distance --- operating submerged for indefinite periods --- to warn
of approaching enemy warships and submarines.
India has
no official project to build SSNs. Even so, the on-going Advanced Technology
Vessel (ATV) project, under which India’s SSBN fleet is being built, is gaining
the technological expertise needed for an SSN project in the future. Meanwhile,
operational expertise and experience is being accumulated on a Russian SSN ---
a 12,770-tonne Akula II submarine, named INS Chakra --- taken by India on a
ten-year lease in 2012 for $900 million.
Senior
admirals, keenly aware of the navy’s shortfalls in sea denial and
anti-submarine capabilities, put on a brave front, arguing that effective sea
control also creates sea denial. True, a CBG exercises sea control over
hundreds of thousands of square kilometres. But there are always crucial areas,
far away from the CBG, where sea denial is essential.
What happened to plans of buying Soryu class submarines from Japan? They are the best DE submarines in the world and given enough push, India can produce them locally. L&T or Pipavav or anyone else can get into a JV and produce. Then it will have additional scope for exporting them to Australia, when time and opportunity arises.
ReplyDeleteWhy is MoD going so slow again? Why can't the government appoint a full time Defence Minister?
Very informative and well written.
ReplyDeleteWe would not have faced this problem had we continued with the HDW project in the 1990s.
ReplyDelete47... naval service split... submarine arm... lost forever...
ReplyDeleteWhy are they all carrying a stick?
ReplyDeleteCujo
From previous post - 5 to 7 more 'drdo years' for mk2?
ReplyDeleteUnlikely Pakistan will be able to afford six type 014 from China. Their current state of economic affairs won't allow that to happen. Also China will not sell them for free.
ReplyDeleteThe story is not limited to Submarines or Sonars alone. It is in Artillery, Fighters, Light helicopters and even ammunition.
ReplyDeleteNo country can expect to 'buy' and aspire to become a Super power. The Great Powers will sell but always ensure that we don't have the optimum capability be it Submarine or Fighter or SONAR or Artillery.
ReplyDeleteArtillery and Submarine are a glaring example of our huge gaps in our preparedness.
Many would agree but wont it make sense to keep project 75 I maturing till it is actually signed and as a stop gap purchase and build 6 Super Improved Kilo Subs from Russia just like Vietnam has done (it would be around $2 Billion) we can also transfer the weaponry from the existing ones so it would save us money. If I am not wrong even Spain offered help to jointly manufacture subs in India, this would impart crucial technology in sub building. We however remain dreamers not doers. Back to the topic; 6 Conventional Subs and 6 SSN besides Project 75i will see us through.
ReplyDelete