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Indian Naval Base INS Vajrakosh, the Largest Naval Base East of the Suez Canal

Dr. Sen

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The massive naval base in Karwar will house two aircraft carriers, over 20 submarines, 47 warships and advanced Naval aircraft.

KARWAR: Away from public glare and pomp, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar on Wednesday commissioned INS Vajrakosh, a naval station near Karwar in Karnataka. Together with INS Kadamba, 20 km, away, it is now the world's largest naval base east of the Suez Canal. Spread out over 1000 acres, the new naval base would be the home base for a bulk of the Indian Navy's strength on the western coast.

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Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar at the commissioning of INS Vajrakosh, with Navy chief Admiral Robin Dhowan (right) and Vice Admiral SPS Cheema, Flag Officer Commanding in Chief of the Western Naval Command (left).

Indian Naval Station Vajrakosh - which loosely translates to 'Thunder Chest' - was constructed as the second phase of Project Seabird, which was initiated by the Centre in 1985. INS Kadamba had been commissioned earlier. INS Vajrakosh alone is spread out over 600 acres.

At the new naval base, The Indian Navy will be positioning two aircraft carriers - INS Vikramaditya and the indigenously built INS Vikrant - over 20 submarines in underground pens and 47 warships. Besides this, it will also have a Naval air station that will base the Boeing P-8i, an advanced maritime surveillance aircraft that is known as 'Poseidon'. The facility will also feature a helicopter base.

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File picture of the advanced Boeing P-8I Poseidon surveillance aircraft, which will be based in Karwar.

As of now, the INS Vikramaditya and over 30 ships are being docked at the Karwar naval base. "The underground pens for the submarines will give additional stealth to the fleet. Unlike Bombay, where submarines are docked in the open and easily spotted by satellites, docking submarines inside pens will make invisible to prying eyes," a senior Naval officer said.


"Apart from the Naval Air Station, INS Vajrakosh will be the biggest missiles, ammunition and spares dump on the Western Sea Board. It will be base that will equip all warships and airplanes," a senior Naval officer who was at the commissioning ceremony told NDTV.

The two installations will together have a 6,500 ton ship lift. "We now have the capability to move all our major warships - except the aircraft carriers - to the dry docks for repairs," the officers said. It will also have a state of the art naval dock yard.

The Karwar base will cost the Indian exchequer Rs. 25000 crore. When it had been conceived in 1985, the criteria had been to relocate the fleet away from the reach of Pakistani fighters. In the age of mid-air re-fullers, that is no longer the case. Enemy fighters can very well reach the new base. Nonetheless, the Karwar Base - an exclusive Naval harbour - will be prove to be major advantage for the Navy. The Bombay, Cochin Harbours - the two major Naval stations in the Western Sea Board - are over-crowded with commercial traffic. "It often takes hours to move in and out of these harbours. From Karwar, we deploy simultaneously in a very short time," a senior official said.
 
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KARWAR: Away from public glare and pomp, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar on Wednesday commissioned INS Vajrakosh, a naval station near Karwar in Karnataka. Together with INS Kadamba, 20 km, away, it is now the world's largest naval base east of the Suez Canal. Spread out over 1000 acres, the new naval base would be the home base for a bulk of the Indian Navy's strength on the western coast.

Actually INS Kadamba is expected to become the largest naval base in the eastern hemisphere after completion of expansion Phase II-B only. Development of Phase II of INS Kadamba commenced in 2011. The environment clearance for Phase II-A and II-B was granted in 2014 and it is now expected to be completed by 2020. The total cost of this project is estimated to be US$3 Billion.

Eagerly waiting for INS Varsha though - Indian SSN and SSBN base. When the base is complete, INS Varsha will be the largest of India’s naval infrastructure to date, eclipsing previously touted projects like INS Kadamba.

OSIMINT-24MAR14-India-Project-Varsha.png

OSIMINT-22APR14-Project-Varsha.png

OSIMINT-10JAN14-Karwar-Vikramaditya.png
 
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Actually INS Kadamba is expected to become the largest naval base in the eastern hemisphere after completion of expansion Phase II-B only. Development of Phase II of INS Kadamba commenced in 2011. The environment clearance for Phase II-A and II-B was granted in 2014 and it is now expected to be completed by 2020. The total cost of this project is estimated to be US$3 Billion.

Eagerly waiting for INS Varsha though - Indian SSN and SSBN base. When the base is complete, INS Varsha will be the largest of India’s naval infrastructure to date, eclipsing previously touted projects like INS Kadamba.

OSIMINT-24MAR14-India-Project-Varsha.png

OSIMINT-22APR14-Project-Varsha.png

OSIMINT-10JAN14-Karwar-Vikramaditya.png


Nice, three of the largest bases east of the Suez will be in India.

And the other ships look tiny beside the Vikramaditya! Amazing pics.
 
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Actually INS Kadamba is expected to become the largest naval base in the eastern hemisphere after completion of expansion Phase II-B only. Development of Phase II of INS Kadamba commenced in 2011. The environment clearance for Phase II-A and II-B was granted in 2014 and it is now expected to be completed by 2020. The total cost of this project is estimated to be US$3 Billion.

Eagerly waiting for INS Varsha though - Indian SSN and SSBN base. When the base is complete, INS Varsha will be the largest of India’s naval infrastructure to date, eclipsing previously touted projects like INS Kadamba.

OSIMINT-24MAR14-India-Project-Varsha.png

OSIMINT-22APR14-Project-Varsha.png

OSIMINT-10JAN14-Karwar-Vikramaditya.png
Please blur or remove the pictures. :)
 
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Excellent news really
Quick Questions:
Are we going to place some fixed wing and rotary wing assets in Vajrakosh? (Apart from P8I)
Whats the nearest base from IAF or IN which is covering that zone?
Is it a no fly zone or commercial flights over are allowed?
With the base now getting operational and Karwar under expansion, hows the entire zone say with radius from Mumbai to Karwar/Vajrakosh to a complete circle protected?
The article pointed that with mid air re-fuelers the base can be reached, so wanted to understand how the base is protected both from Air as well as from say Subs..
Again hows the coast guard defence and assets placed in and around both the bases? Dornier birds for SAR?

@Abingdonboy @Capt.Popeye @MilSpec @SpArK @AUSTERLITZ
 
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Are we going to place some fixed wing and rotary wing assets in Vajrakosh? (Apart from P8I)
Helos and UAVs are a certainty, I'm not sure about fighters but in the long term more than likely.

Is it a no fly zone or commercial flights over are allowed?
This would certainly come under "restricted airspace".

With the base now getting operational and Karwar under expansion, hows the entire zone say with radius from Mumbai to Karwar/Vajrakosh to a complete circle protected?
The article pointed that with mid air re-fuelers the base can be reached, so wanted to understand how the base is protected both from Air as well as from say Subs..
Again hows the coast guard defence and assets placed in and around both the bases? Dornier birds for SAR?

There will be multiple layers of cover from both the air, sea and land.

Air- As the IAF is solely responsible for securing 100% of Indian airspace it will be down to them to provide radar and fighter cover for this base (as they do for the rest of the country). The IN will also have its, independent, land based, search,track and destroy capability deployed at all such vital installations (i.e. SAMs with their necessary radars).

Sea- As with the rest of the Indian coastline this is the responsibility of the IN/ICG/Marine police in concentric circles and post-26/11 the Indian coast has largely been secured by the revamped emphasis on coastal security and MASSIVE investment in the ICG and coastal security systems. As this is a naval base there will be additional security including the IN's own force protection unit (the SPB) who will provide full spectrum harbour security and the IN has no doubt installed a state of the art harbour protection system as they have already done in Kochi.

Land- All military bases in India have very tight security featuring multiple layers of fencing, force protection units (military police and DSC), intruder detection systems, UGS etc etc


The Indian military doesn't mess around when it comes to securing its assets and if it has just sunk upwards of $3 billion USD in new bases you can be certain this figure included some serious security measures and such considerations were made from the outset.
 
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India will almost certainly have the 3rd largest navy in the world by 2030

3 carrier battle groups with over 100 warships Imo by 2030

Vishal
Vikrant
Vikramditya


15-20 destroyers kolkatta class banglore class
25+ Frigates Shilvaik & Talwar class
25+ Corvettes missles boats Kormata class

6-8 nuclear subs Arihant & Akula class
18-24 conventional subs Scorpene Amur & Kilo
 
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Both the Carrier's are going to be based here???? I thought they might have one at eastern coast.....
 
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