Zarvan
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Indian Para (Special Forces)
With India’s armed forces still awaiting a new service rifle, it seems that Indian Special Forces are forging on ahead. Indian media outlets have reported that India’s Para (Special Forces) unit have selected the 7.62x51mm FN SCAR-H along with a number of other weapons.
FN SCAR-H (FN Herstal)
The procurement is to be made through Indian Army budgets and not as part of a larger Ministry of Defence procurement. This sidesteps the Indian government’s design to focus on ‘Made In India’ procurement. The orders will be made via the US government on behalf of India via the Foreign Military Sales system. The Indian press report the cost of the procurement package at around Rs 800 crore, which roughly equates to $106 million, making it a major order.
India’s Police Seek New Service Rifles
In other news out of India, the government’s Ministry of Home Affairs has begun discussions with a large number of companies to procure new assault rifles for a number of Indian police forces. The Economic Times of India reported that the Ministry of Home Affairs has been in talks with 17 private Indian manufacturers including large companies, that aren’t necessarily involved in the arms manufacturing industry, such as Larsen & Toubro, Vem Technologies, Godrej, Kalyani Strategic, Shyam Arms, Premier Explosives and HYT.
Members of the Central Industrial Security Force with AKs and MP5s (www.thehindu.com)
The scope of the requirement and the potential contracts for rifles are huge. Police forces and paramilitary units across India require new weapons including the Assam Rifles, the National Security Guard, the Central Industrial Security Force, the Sashastra Seema Bal (paramilitary border force), the Central Reserve Police Force, the Border Security Force and the Indo-Tibetan Border Police. These organisations have been asked to provide requirements for the types of small arms they need for Indian industry to respond.
This push to engage India’s private industry rather than call on the network of State-owned Ordnance Factory Board (OFB) plants across India could be seen as a play in the ongoing dispute with the OFB’s workforce who, as we have reported previously, are threatening strike action in response to government attempts to ‘corporatise’ the OFB factories. The push also comes as part of the Indian government’s ‘Made In India’ program, which the Para (Special Forces) procurement sidesteps.
Matthew Moss
Matthew Moss – Assistant Editor.
Matt is a British historian specialising in small arms development and military history. He has written for a variety of publications in both the US and UK he also runs www.historicalfirearms.info, a blog that explores the history, development and use of firearms. Matt is also co-founder of www.armourersbench.com, a new video series on historically significant small arms.
Reach Matt at: matt@thefirearmblog.com
https://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2020/07/03/fn-scar-h-for-indian-special-forces/