By the first week of next March, the
Indian Navy (IN) is expected to receive all responses to the RfP issued on
August 7, which calls for the supply of 56 armed light twin-engined multi-role
helicopters between 2016 and 2023. The RfPs, which have already been received
by Eurocopter SA, Bell Helicopter Textron, Boeing, AgustaWestland and
Rosoboronexport State Corp/OBORONPROM, are most likely to result in the
shortlisting of two contenders—in all probability the Bell 429 and AW-109P—following
which final selection based on the lowest bidder (L-1) will be made. As of now,
the Bell 429, MD-900 Explorer, A-109Power and AS.555 Fennec are the contenders.
The winning design (which I believe will be the Bell 429) will be required to
have a MTOW of 4.5 tonnes, be armed with 70mm unguided air-to-surface rockets, twin
lightweight torpedoes and a pintle-mounted 12.7mm machine gun, be equipped with
night vision-compatible glass cockpit avionics and a chin-mounted FLIR turret,
along with a nose-mounted search radar and an emergency floatation system. Also
to be acquired will be three simulators (of which one will be a full-flight
unit) and 28 spare engines. Of the 56 light twin-engined multi-role
helicopters, 46 will be of the armed-type, while the remaining 10 will be
utilised for flying training purposes. The 46 units will be deployed on board
the IN’s planned five 2,500-tonne AOPVs
now being built by Pipavav Defence & Offshore
Engineering Co Ltd, four NOPVs built by Goa
Shipyard Ltd (GSL), and the 16 stealthy 400-tonne shallow water ASW patrol
vessels of a foreign design (being proposed by Thyseenkrupp Marine Systems,
DCNS and Rosoboronexport State Corp), which are likely to be built by both GSL
and Hindustan Shipyard Ltd. The stealthy shallow-water ASW patrol vessels will
each be equipped with two twin-tube heavyweight torpedo launchers, hull-mounted
panoramic sonar, stern-mounted active/passive towed-array sonar, and a
VSHORADS-based point air-defence system like MBDA’s SADRAL.
In
another development, in response to a restricted RfP which my company, TRIDENT
AVIATION SERVICES, had floated a while ago (calling for innovative solutions for
a helicopter aircrew’s night-vision enhancement systems suitable for
Mi-17V-5-type helicopters), Italy-based SELEX Galileo Ltd, a Finmeccanica
company, has come up with the VIGIL-X airborne enhanced situational awareness
system, whose brochure is displayed below. Needless to say, such a system will
be a highly useful night-navigation tool worldwide for those medium-lift
helicopters that are engaged in flights over high-altitude mountainous terrain,
or for shipborne MRHs when flying over the high seas.
Meanwhile,
shipment of a new batch of 50 JF-17 Thunder MRCAs began three days ago to the
Kamra-based Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC) for final assembly. The PAF’s
IL-78MKPs were spotted at Chengdu three days ago for loading the CAC-built
JF-17s in semi-knocked-down condition and ferry-flying them to PAC Kamra. My
appreciation is that the nine-member suicide squad of the Tehreek-e-Taliban
Pakistan (TTP) was trying to target the four IL-78MKPs that are involved in
airlifting the JF-17s from Chengdu.
But most astonishing is the fact that
50% of Pakistanis do not consider the 30 million Pakistani Shias to be Muslims,
this according to a recent opinion survey poll conducted the US-based Pew
Research Center. If this is indeed the case, then this would mean that the
founding father of Pakistan—Quaid-e-Azam Mohd Ali Jinnah—himself a Shia, isn’t
a Muslim anymore! (see: http://dawn.com/2012/08/15/who-gets-to-be-a-muslim-in-pakistan/).
Is Pakistan therefore now well past the incipient stages of an on-going civil
war?
Lastly,
fellow bloggers may be interested in watching a video (see: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGweDRqj1iU) produced by the US-based Georgetown University for a recent arms
control seminar, which showcases the more-than 3,000 miles of underground
tunnels built so far by the PLA’s 2nd Artillery Corps for the
peacetime storage of its vast arsenal of rocket-propelled artillery assets. And
it appears increasingly likely that India too is following suit by initiating
the construction of 18 horse shoe-shaped 8.82km-long hardened weapons storage
facilities in Jammu & Kashmir (under the 13,400-feet Rohtang Pass on the Manali-Sarchu-Leh axis that is due for completion by February 2015,
followed by similar facilities in Zozi-La, Z-Morh, Razdhan Pass, Khardung-La
and Sadhana Pass), Sikkim (at Theng and Rangpo) and Arunachal Pradesh (at the Balipara-Charduar-Tawang axis). Site-selection of the first seven such hardened underground
facilities has already been completed. It is these facilities will house the 550km-range
BrahMos-1 Block-3 supersonic NLOS-BSMs and the projected 150km-range Prahaar
NLOS-BSMs.