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India Lifts Veil on Army as Modi Prepares to Spend $150 Billion

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  • India Lifts Veil on Army as Modi Prepares to Spend $150 Billion

  • 3_img129716093412.jpg

For private-sector executives in India who normally get only snippets of information to design components of complex military hardware, climbing into tanks and talking to combat soldiers is an eye-opener.

Earlier this month, more than 200 representatives of defense companies -- big and small, local and foreign -- got unprecedented access to India’s secretive military. At two events in the western city of Ahmednagar, they crawled inside tanks, learned about the army’s equipment needs and spoke with troops on the front lines in Kashmir, a region also claimed by main rival Pakistan.

“You could feel how the soldier would adjust themselves in a tight space,” said Rajesh Khurana, an associate vice-president at Bharat Forge Ltd., a major Indian manufacturing defense firm, who noted that he personally climbed inside of a tank. "It was a pretty intimate affair."

The new-found transparency is part of Modi’s efforts to transform the world’s biggest arms importer into a defense manufacturing powerhouse as he spends $150 billion over the next decade to modernize the armed forces. Closer collaboration with the military would increase the technological capacity of local companies and create jobs as more than 10 million Indians join the work force each year.


Opening Up

“We’ve seen the army open up under this current leadership," said Jayant D. Patil, a senior vice-president with Larsen & Toubro Ltd., which makes parts for everything from missiles to submarines. “The army is trying to build a relationship with the private sector. They’re communicating what their real needs are and want us to know what kind of problems they see in their day to day life -- and then industry can build solutions."

For the past few decades, publicly owned defense companies have repeatedly failed to do just that.

Almost two-thirds of the army’s contracts for critical weapons and equipment concluded from 2007 to 2012 -- worth nearly $4.5 billion -- were delayed, India’s national auditor said in a report this week. The foot-dragging was so severe that it “hampered" the military’s modernization plan and impacted defense preparedness, the report said, blaming the delays in part on a “heavy dependence" on imported weapons.


Arms Imports

Nitin Wakankar, a defense ministry spokesman, had no comment on the auditor’s report. In response to questions, the army said the Ahmednagar events stemmed from Modi’s campaign for companies to “Make in India." The policy aimed to “harness the preparedness of the Indian private industry towards meeting the felt-needs of the armed forces" and “reduce dependence on foreign vendors," it said.

India relies on imports for 60 percent of its defense requirements, much of which has come from Russia due to a previous Cold War alliance between Delhi and the Soviet Union. Of late, it has bought more weapons from the U.S., becoming one of the top markets for American defense companies.

The Ahmednagar events featured executives from Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd., Tata Group, Larsen & Toubro and Bharat Forge. Participation among foreign defense companies was limited to those with India offices, including Honeywell International Inc. and Dassault Aviation SA.


‘Blind Guess’

All attendees had to be Indian nationals, vetted and approved by the army. The invitations to small-and-medium-sized defense firms were a first in a sector that prizes scale and a country that tends to favor conglomerates.

Subimal Bhattacharjee, a security expert and former India country head for U.S.-based defense firm General Dynamics Corp., said the military went beyond merely talking about its equipment: Army officials, who wanted a new engine design, actually gave six Russian-made infantry combat vehicles to two private companies.

“You have a chance to see the vehicle with the whole team, to have a clear understanding of what can be done," said Bhattacharjee, who attended the event. “You don’t have to make a blind guess. You have a vehicle to yourself that you can play around with and understand better."


Defense Failures

India’s defense companies have a long track record of failing to deliver. A 40-year effort by the government to develop a battlefield tank has yet to produce anything the army can use. Similarly, a project to produce an anti-tank guided missile has seen repeated setbacks, forcing India to acquire them from Russia, France and Israel.

The army had previously refused to discuss procurement projects unless they received a formal request, Deepak Sinha, a retired army veteran who oversaw procurement for the Indian Special Forces, said in an e-mail. And even then the military never told defense contractors about “procurement philosophy or future plans," he said.

“The army has always preferred to keep interaction with business houses to the minimum," said Sinha, who served in the military for more than three decades. “This interaction with business executives would certainly be a first, and a very good omen at that."
 
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India should emphasise make in India for its defence requirements. By using $150 billion as a bait, India should ask LM, Boeing and other defence companies to set up companies in India. India can be a base for these companies for defence exports.
 
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and you should buy from them not the US. :sarcastic:
we most sell some time buy and some get for free from usa
what we cant mae our self like atack plane submerine we buy what we can make ourself we dont buy and what we can get for free is free
 
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we most sell some time buy and some get for free from usa
what we cant mae our self like atack plane submerine we buy what we can make ourself we dont buy and what we can get for free is free

Even India should do the same. Instead of putting hands in everything, India should identify areas where it should strive to become self sufficient, and areas where it will go for total procurement.

Just one moment while I contact my father Defence Minister Parrikar and tell him to buy Israeli instead of American.

:D Parrikar has sons and no daughters.
 
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we know our limited and what we good on helicopter atack plane frigate is to much expnsive for our industery

india should focus what she good of and develop for themself what youu canot buy from other
 
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even usa imported from others
we develop plane at 1986 with usa money it called lavie and usa stop the project because they feare for contest so we dtop manufacture baecuse it was too expensive for us
 
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India is struggling to manage $10 billion to save its face on decade long Rafael negotiations where is Modi going to get 150 billion?


  • India Lifts Veil on Army as Modi Prepares to Spend $150 Billion

  • 3_img129716093412.jpg
For private-sector executives in India who normally get only snippets of information to design components of complex military hardware, climbing into tanks and talking to combat soldiers is an eye-opener.

Earlier this month, more than 200 representatives of defense companies -- big and small, local and foreign -- got unprecedented access to India’s secretive military. At two events in the western city of Ahmednagar, they crawled inside tanks, learned about the army’s equipment needs and spoke with troops on the front lines in Kashmir, a region also claimed by main rival Pakistan.

“You could feel how the soldier would adjust themselves in a tight space,” said Rajesh Khurana, an associate vice-president at Bharat Forge Ltd., a major Indian manufacturing defense firm, who noted that he personally climbed inside of a tank. "It was a pretty intimate affair."

The new-found transparency is part of Modi’s efforts to transform the world’s biggest arms importer into a defense manufacturing powerhouse as he spends $150 billion over the next decade to modernize the armed forces. Closer collaboration with the military would increase the technological capacity of local companies and create jobs as more than 10 million Indians join the work force each year.


Opening Up

“We’ve seen the army open up under this current leadership," said Jayant D. Patil, a senior vice-president with Larsen & Toubro Ltd., which makes parts for everything from missiles to submarines. “The army is trying to build a relationship with the private sector. They’re communicating what their real needs are and want us to know what kind of problems they see in their day to day life -- and then industry can build solutions."

For the past few decades, publicly owned defense companies have repeatedly failed to do just that.

Almost two-thirds of the army’s contracts for critical weapons and equipment concluded from 2007 to 2012 -- worth nearly $4.5 billion -- were delayed, India’s national auditor said in a report this week. The foot-dragging was so severe that it “hampered" the military’s modernization plan and impacted defense preparedness, the report said, blaming the delays in part on a “heavy dependence" on imported weapons.


Arms Imports

Nitin Wakankar, a defense ministry spokesman, had no comment on the auditor’s report. In response to questions, the army said the Ahmednagar events stemmed from Modi’s campaign for companies to “Make in India." The policy aimed to “harness the preparedness of the Indian private industry towards meeting the felt-needs of the armed forces" and “reduce dependence on foreign vendors," it said.

India relies on imports for 60 percent of its defense requirements, much of which has come from Russia due to a previous Cold War alliance between Delhi and the Soviet Union. Of late, it has bought more weapons from the U.S., becoming one of the top markets for American defense companies.

The Ahmednagar events featured executives from Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd., Tata Group, Larsen & Toubro and Bharat Forge. Participation among foreign defense companies was limited to those with India offices, including Honeywell International Inc. and Dassault Aviation SA.


‘Blind Guess’

All attendees had to be Indian nationals, vetted and approved by the army. The invitations to small-and-medium-sized defense firms were a first in a sector that prizes scale and a country that tends to favor conglomerates.

Subimal Bhattacharjee, a security expert and former India country head for U.S.-based defense firm General Dynamics Corp., said the military went beyond merely talking about its equipment: Army officials, who wanted a new engine design, actually gave six Russian-made infantry combat vehicles to two private companies.

“You have a chance to see the vehicle with the whole team, to have a clear understanding of what can be done," said Bhattacharjee, who attended the event. “You don’t have to make a blind guess. You have a vehicle to yourself that you can play around with and understand better."


Defense Failures

India’s defense companies have a long track record of failing to deliver. A 40-year effort by the government to develop a battlefield tank has yet to produce anything the army can use. Similarly, a project to produce an anti-tank guided missile has seen repeated setbacks, forcing India to acquire them from Russia, France and Israel.

The army had previously refused to discuss procurement projects unless they received a formal request, Deepak Sinha, a retired army veteran who oversaw procurement for the Indian Special Forces, said in an e-mail. And even then the military never told defense contractors about “procurement philosophy or future plans," he said.

“The army has always preferred to keep interaction with business houses to the minimum," said Sinha, who served in the military for more than three decades. “This interaction with business executives would certainly be a first, and a very good omen at that."
 
. . .
India is struggling to manage $10 billion to save its face on decade long Rafael negotiations where is Modi going to get 150 billion?

I don't think India is struggling for $10 billion, India's forex reserve is itself near $400 billion. India buy defence equipment like vegetable. India bargain on and on until the opposite person gives up :D. Rafale are sure to join IAF.
 
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India is struggling to manage $10 billion to save its face on decade long Rafael negotiations where is Modi going to get 150 billion?
refael is wrong to expensive for the franch plane 200 milion for atack plane?
 
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even usa imported from others
we develop plane at 1986 with usa money it called lavie and usa stop the project because they feare for contest so we dtop manufacture baecuse it was too expensive for us
And I know where exactly that LAVI has landed.. You are blunt, but what you say is correct..

My father says he's ready to buy 1000 Merkavas.
Merkavas?? That too a Thousand?? Trust me dear, India has crossed over the idea of Main battle tanks.. Apart from Arjun there will be no more tank projects undertaken.. Nor a new Platform will be bought any more..
 
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