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Friday, January 23, 2015
Wednesday, January 7, 2015
Compounded Irrationalities Due To Systematic Stupidity-1
As the saying goes, “Those who know
much, talk little”. But its meaning seems to have been lost on India’s new
Raksha Mantri (Defence Minister) Manohar Parrikar, if we are to believe what he
was reported to have said at an on-the-record press conference on December 30,
2014 regarding the procurement of 189 Rafale medium multi-role combat aircraft
(M-MRCA). Most of the ‘desi’ newspapers attributed two statements to Parrikar: (1) additional licence-built Su-30MKIs
are adequate for the IAF in case it is decided not to procure the Rafale; and (2) The Su-30MKI is an adequate
aircraft for meeting the air force’s needs. Now, while it is understandable for
a select group of ‘desi’ journalists to deliberately twist-and-turn the Raksha
Mantri’s statements/observations (since for the past 18 months they have either
been promoting, for their own vested financial interests, the procurement of
either the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter or the Eurofighter EF-2000), in case these
‘desi’ journalists for once did get it right and correctly quoted the Raksha
Mantri, then India is indeed in some serious trouble.
Let me explain how and why. Neither the
Su-30MKI nor the MiG-29UPG/MiG-29K were ever designed as multi-role combat
aircraft (MRCA). Their design and performance parameters were instead optimised
for air dominance/air superiority, with standoff all-weather precision strike undertaken
from medium altitudes being a secondary capability. It is for this reason that
the erstwhile USSR had developed the Su-24 and Su-27IB/Su-34 as all-weather,
terrain-hugging deep penetration strike aircraft (DPSA), and the Su-25 as a
dedicated tactical strike/close air support aircraft. Consequently, neither the
Su-30MKI’s nor the MiG-29UPG’s/MiG-29K’s airframes have the stress tolerances
that are required for flying terrain-hugging flight profiles. Their existing X-band
multi-mode radars or MMR (RLSU-30MK
NO-11M ‘Bars’ and the Zhuk-M2E) therefore don’t come with low-altitude terrain
avoidance mode or automatic terrain-following capability or weather-mapping
mode, and neither are they equipped with low-altitude navigation pods.
Consequently, the only true M-MRCAs that
are operational today in an area between India and Japan is the Republic of
Singapore Air Force’s Boeing-built F-15SGs, which come equipped with Raytheon-supplied
APG-63(V)3 AESA-MMR, Boeing/ELBIT Systems joint helmet mounted cueing system
(JHMCS), TIGER Eyes Sensor Suite comprising Lockheed Martin’s
AAQ-13 LANTIRN-ER navigation pod (containing a mid-wave staring-array FLIR sensor and a terrain-following radar and
forward-looking infra-red sensor), an AAQ-33 Sniper XR targetting pod containing
a mid-wave staring-array FLIR sensor with a
40,000-feet laser and charge-couple device (CCD) TV, and the AAS-43 infra-red
search-and-track (IRST) system containing a passive
long-wave IR sensor.
Simply put, therefore, the IAF is in dire need of
procuring an M-MRCA fleet with automatic terrain-following capability—which
the Rafale is optimised for. Presently, the IAF operates 3 MiG-29B-12
squadrons (now being upgraded to MiG-29UPG standard), 9 MiG-21 Bison squadrons,
4 Jaguar IS squadrons, 1 Jaguar IM squadron, 10 Su-30MKI squadrons, 3 Mirage
2000H/TH squadrons (being upgraded to Mirage 2000UPG standard), 3 MiG-27UPG
squadrons, and 2 MiG-27M squadrons, making a total of 35 squadrons. Although
the sanctioned strength of the IAF is 42 combat aircraft squadrons (which is
due for increase to 50 squadrons
by 2024, at least on paper), of these, those equipped with MiG-21
Bisons, MiG-27UPGs and MiG-27Ms will have to be decommissioned by 2017 at the latest.
Presently, the IAF is gearing up to form
the first ‘Tejas’ Mk1 squadron—No45 ‘Flying Daggers’ Sqn—which will initially
be first raised in Bengaluru before relocating to Sulur in Coimbatore, Tamil
Nadu, this March. Present plans call for the first four IOC-standard) Tejas Mk1
MRCAs built by the MoD-owned Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) to be delivered by
March 31, 2015, another six by March 31, 2016, and another eight by March 31,
2017. This squadron will, however, be declared fully operational only in 2022,
once its 18 Tejas Mk1s are upgraded to FOC standard. The second Tejas Mk1-equipped
squadron, comprising 20 FOC-standard MRCAs, will be formed up in 2017 and will
become fully operational by March 31, 2020. All Tejas Mkls will be equipped
with Israel Aerospace Industries/ELTA Systems-supplied EL/M-2032 MMRs, which
will possess both automatic terrain-following and
weather mapping modes of operation.
Going by calculations based on universal
norms, I have estimated the flyaway unit cost of procuring 40 Tejas Mk1s as
being US$52 million. To this must be added the cost of air base customisation
and procurement of weapons packages, all of which works to out about US$72
million per aircraft.
Meanwhile, to replace the MiG-27UPGs and
MiG-27Ms, 68 Jaguar IS aircraft are presently being upgraded to DARIN 3-standard
so that they can undertake all-weather tactical strike/close air support
operations. This Rs.31.3 billion (US$0.57 billion) contract was awarded to HAL
in March 2008 and is due for completion by December 2017. The upgraded Jaguar
IS too will have on board the EL/M-2032 MMRs possessing both automatic terrain-following
and weather mapping modes of operation.
From the above, it becomes clear that
the IAF is now in desperate need of M-MRCAs with credible deep penetration
strike capabilities and capable of flying terrain-hugging profiles. It is also
well-known that the IAF wants to arrest the steady decline of its frontline
combat aircraft inventory ASAP. The only available options—all non-negotiable—are
as follows:
1) Ink the procurement contract for 189
Rafales latest by June 2015.
2) Increase the size of the Su-30MKI
fleet to no less than 350 by procuring the first 50 Super Su-30MKIs in semi-knocked-down
condition from Russia’s IRKUT Corp, starting 2017, while concurrently commencing
the upgrading of in-service Su-30MKIs in successive tranches to Super
Sukhoi-standard.
3) Increase the quantum of Jaguar IS
being upgraded to DARIN 3-stadard from 68 to 125 and re-engine the entire fleet
with Honeywell-supplied F-125 turbofans.
Now a brief explanation on why the Rafale M-MRCA
procurement’s contract signature has been subjected to delays. Firstly, there
was the financial crunch over the past two years. Secondly, the Union Ministry
for Home Affairs had in 2012 issued mandatory industrial security-related regulations
that called for comprehensive vetting (a most time-consuming process) of all
technical and managerial personnel of those India-based Tier-1, Tier-2 and
Tier-3 companies that were selected for the
licence-manufacturing/licenced-assembly components of the Rafale M-MRCA. Thirdly,
since French aerospace OEMs have always made use of France-origin precision machining,
riveting and welding equipment and related test-benches, this time too they
insisted that HAL and its sub-contractors procure all such hardware exclusively
from French OEMs, instead of issuing global tenders for such industrial hardware
procurements. Had HAL not agreed to comply with this key issue, all the
involved French OEMs would have been unable to issue certificates of
airworthiness for all those Rafales licence-built by HAL. It is this issue that
has been most time-consuming and in the end, HAL had no other choice but to give-in.
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