By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 27th Aug 16
An
important section of the Indian Navy headquarters in New Delhi has changed its
biorhythm to Melbourne time, monitoring The Australian newspaper as it
publishes leaked documents containing the operational secrets of India’s new
Scorpene submarines.
As The
Australian incrementally publishes tranches from the 22,400 pages of sensitive
documents that it indicates were leaked from French shipbuilder, DCNS, naval
planners in Delhi scour them in real time for information that might make
India’s Scorpene submarine fleet sitting ducks in combat.
The newspaper
is redacting the documents it publishes, blacking out data it deems particularly
sensitive. Indian officials, including Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar on
Friday, say they are catering for a “best case scenario”, and “worst case
scenario”. The latter encompasses the possibility that the full version of the
documents have fallen into hostile hands, and six Scorpene submarines that will
join the navy’s fleet by 2019 have been operationally compromised.
A
“high-level committee” has been established in the defence ministry to evaluate
the extent of the damage.
Surprisingly,
defence ministry sources say DCNS has not yet responded to an Indian query
about how, when and to what extent Scorpene operational data has been
compromised. With DCNS silent, the navy is comparing the leaked trove of documents,
as they are published in The Australian, with the documents in India.
Yet, the
defence ministry is displaying remarkable tolerance of the leaks from DCNS,
despite those being apparent violations of non-disclosure clauses that form a
part of the Scorpene contract.
“We cannot
say for sure whether DCNS has violated a non-disclosure clause. What happens if
the information was stolen, or hacked from DCNS networks?” argues a MoD official.
Nor is the
defence ministry willing to comment on whether this leak will affect DCNS’s
chances of bagging an order for additional Scorpenes, beyond the six already contracted
under Project 75. Officials say DCNS even remains eligible for Project 75-I ---
India’s proposed purchase of six conventional submarines with air-independent
propulsion (AIP).
“We are
evaluating the situation as information is released”, says an official.
Ministry
officials remain perplexingly sanguine about what analysts world-wide regard as
an extremely worrying leak of data relating to operational capability ---
including electromagnetic frequencies for intelligence gathering, details of
the Scorpene’s sonar system, including the frequency of its various arrays and
approximate acoustic signature, including that of its propeller. Much of the
compromised data is not yet publicly known, since The Australian has published
only a tiny portion of the documents it claims to have.
“A
submarine is a highly customized weapon system. The navy has selected the equipment
for the Indian Scorpene; in fact, some of the weapon systems have not yet been
chosen. The 5-6 year-old data that has been leaked relates to a generic version
of the Scorpene, perhaps the Chilean or Malaysian submarine, not to the
customized Indian vessel”, explains one official.
The Indian
Navy has arrived at this conclusion after reviewing just 13 published pages out
of the 22,400 pages that The Australian claims it has reviewed.
Says
another official, downplaying the leak: “Vendors like DCNS freely supply generic
information to any prospective customer. It is like a Maruti car dealer, who
will supply details of a car to any customer who requests it.”
Asked why
the leaked documents bear the Indian Navy logo, are translated from French into
English, and have each page stamped with the logo “Restricted Scorpene India”; defence
ministry officials explain that could be because DCNS, and other French vendors
like Thales, had customized the documents for India.
That,
however, would indicate that the leaked documents related to the customized
Indian version of the Scorpene.
On the plus
side, New Delhi’s years of delay in choosing weapon systems for the Scorpene
might have worked to the navy’s advantage. The long-range torpedo, a
submarine’s primary weapon, has not yet been selected --- partly because the
vendor chosen earlier was WASS, a subsidiary of the sanctioned Finmeccanica
group.
Other
systems, like electronic warfare equipment and sonar, may have been saved from
exposure because they have been substantially indigenized. The French vendors,
DCNS and Thales, are required to merely provide plug-in slots that will house
the secret Indian equipment.
What are you trying to prove ? What do you want navy to do ; cancel the contract or list out all corrective steps in public ?
ReplyDeleteThis issue will also be handled in the parliament, the parliamentary defence committees and am sure where necessary navy will take suitable action.
Only an idiot will annouce in public which of 22000 pages are critical.
This is unacceptable by any standards and ask for atleast half refund which DCNS would not give and go for arbitration court. Indians security is breeches.
ReplyDeleteThe worse case scenario is that our billion dollar sub has just been converted to a Maruti-800..
ReplyDeleteThe French have a lot to answer for...
Quote "information that might make India’s Scorpene submarine fleet sitting ducks in combat" .. well what about peace time? We all know that subs are tools for effectively probing of enemy defences and gathering intelligence even during peace time.
ReplyDeleteWith critical frequencies/ and approx acoustic signature of its sensors and propellers compromised, it makes finding this sub that much easier.
I am waiting for PLAN and PN to jointly tweet "good morning and welcome" each time this sub leaves its home port..
Both Navy and DCNS know their job...as the data itself is categorised as "restricted" and not "classified" shows it to be more of commercial info and moreover indian scorpene are yet to begin sea trials to ascertain various parameters. This information is shared often by manufacturers in RFIs..lastly GOI needs DCNS/french govt support for building our next gen SSNs.So it is right to assess the damage if any before jumping to any conclusions
ReplyDeleteMy understanding is that the Indian scorpenes are more like assembled PCs where we an choose the components that go into it.In that sense the damage from the leaks can be mitigated
ReplyDeleteNone of those 22000 pages are critical. The writer knows this too well but deliberately sensationalising. This is why the files are termed RESTRICTED not TOP SECRET. Nothing in those pages pertain to Indian Scorpene's operational secrets as these have not been formalised yet. All this is a commercial detailed features much like the specs sheet you get from a car manufacturer only more comprehensive for a serious buyer. DCNS is silent because it knows how dumb the whole saga is especially the fact it went to Australia! If this leak was true and compromised Indian security then India ought to junk all the Kilo class subs as China uses them too and SU-30 should be junked as well because China uses them meaning Pakistan should have all the operational data! That tells you how wicked this business is - ramping up misinformation in the name of patriotism!
ReplyDeleteThe subs are not in operational but building phase and weapons are probably not decided yet.
ReplyDeleteBandalbazz next your turn after NDTV http://satyavijayi.com/dr-subramanian-swamy-writes-pm-initiate-cbi-ed-inquiry-ndtv/
ReplyDelete