By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 12th April 18
The Ministry of Defence’s (MoD’s) draft Defence Production
Policy (DProP) spells out the goal of making India self sufficient in 13 key
weapons – including fighters, warships, submarines, and tanks – by 2022 and,
eventually, one of the world’s top five defence manufacturing countries.
Yet, at Defexpo 2018, which opened in Chennai on Wednesday,
Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman stated she had only a limited ability to
induce the military to use indigenously designed and manufactured weaponry.
Responding to a question at a packed press conference,
Sitharaman said she could only tell the Indian armed forces to procure from
indigenous companies “as much as possible”, but could not cross a “thin line”
in preventing the military from “making their decisions on what they want”,
guided by operational needs.
“When I am promoting Indian exports (and) Indian
manufacturing, I am also telling the forces to procure from them. They do too.
But I would want to draw a thin line, and I am conscious that it is a thin
line, between the government’s enthusiasm to make sure the production capabilities
are such that they can meet with international standards and be export-worthy;
and the other side of the line where Army or Navy or Air Force make their
decision on what they want, what combination of equipment they want, and in
that combination if an Indian produced item fits in.”
“I can only go that far and not further, just as they can go
that far and not any further without compromising each others’ interest and my
interest is not different from theirs, because after all MoD has to take care
of the forces as much as the defence production”, she said.
The four-day Defexpo 2018, a biennial event that is being
held in Chennai for the first time in its 19-year history, features a live
demonstration of weapons systems made in India. Yet, with the Indian military
historically resistant to accepting substantial numbers of Arjun tanks, Tejas
fighters, Akash air defence batteries and other indigenous systems, production
has been limited to small numbers for the military and nothing for the export
markets.
Answering questions about the shift of Defexpo to Chennai,
Sitharaman pointed to the designation of the Chennai-Bengaluru corridor as a
“defence production corridor”.
“I am grateful that my predecessor Manohar Parrikar in this
ministry took it over to Goa. Now because the Prime Minister has been saying
repeatedly to go out of Delhi, to all parts of the country, we have chosen to
come here. Therefore, this is a best opportunity for Tamil Nadu to be able to
cash on it and many of the industries, which can come and benefit from here,”
she said.
Asked whether future
Defexpos would also be held in Chennai, Sitharaman said a permanent location
had not been decided.
Sitharaman also talked up the current location as a tourist
centre and as the historical epicentre of Chola power, where the ancient South
Indian dynasty ruled for a 1,000 years.
“You are sitting in a historically important place, from
where huge ships of the Chola kingdom had gone to the entire South East Asia…
So if today we are talking of Indian Ocean region, if we are talking about the
region becoming Indo-Pacific, this was all achieved by the Cholas here,
already,” she said.
Addressing the question of when the draft DProP would be
finalised, Secretary for Defence Production Ajay Kumar declined to set a
deadline. “The draft (DProP) has been released for public consultations. We
have received over 100 comments from various stakeholders… We are in the
process of examining those comments. We hope to see the final policy very
soon,” he said.
Neither Sitharaman nor Defence Secretary Sanjay Mitra would
commit to the early finalisation of the procurement of 110 fighter aircraft
that the Indian Air Force initiated last month. Suggesting that the procurement
process remained as slow as ever, Mitra stated: “These are still early days. We
have taken only the first step (by issuing a request for information). This is
a long process.”
Sitharaman praised the Defence Research & Development
Organisation (DRDO), which she stated had developed as many as 50 technologies
that could be translated by the private sector into “commercially usable
technologies”. At a subsequent function, the DRDO handed over the intellectual
property rights to several of its technologies to private companies to
translate into commercial production.
Like an Imaginary line!!
ReplyDeleteSurely you are not calling for the old reactionary ways of what would be in effect protectionist barriers. You Broadsword seem to be calling on the government, to force our Armed Forces to buy Indian instead of procuring the best internationally.
ReplyDeleteIt’s curious because you previous blogs show your indignation at the favouritism given to the Public sector - and we heard (loud and clear) your cries of ‘unfair’ in support of the disadvantage by private sector companies like L & T, when faced with unequal competition.
But now you seem to be against an environment where our defence companies have to stand up and compete with the best internationally?
Have I failed to understand something?
If our own defence forces are not willing to induct indigenous products and prove their worth, how can one expect a foreign country to spend their money on it? It's always the proven products that have demand. Only pressing upon exports will not do the trick here. Our forces have to buckle up too.. And gov't definitely need to draw a line thin or thick..
ReplyDeleteI think we are misuderstanding. Out RM would have meant it is not feasible to make all the stuff in India. The indian industry too has to mature.
ReplyDelete