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Sindhuratna and beyond

kurup

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Submarining has always been a dangerous profession, meant only for volunteers drawn from serving navy personnel. It is also a relatively young man’s profession, with commanding officers of conventional submarines going “over the top” in their late thirties, into staff jobs. The selection is strict and the training rigorous. New entrants are carefully screened in psychological tests to survive in close proximity, under difficult conditions, with other human beings, for long periods of time. Not surprisingly, the camaraderie is close and submariners make friends for life.

The Indian submarine service commissioned its first submarine in 1967 and the pioneers realised the imperative of laying down the strictest standards of safety right at the beginning. The explosion on Sindhurakshak occurred in 2013, after years of accident-free service. The Sindhuratna fire, close on the heels of the earlier explosion, poses a huge leadership challenge to senior naval officers in assuring serving submarine personnel that their weapon platforms are reliable weapons to fight with. The “Kilo,” as these submarines are referred to in the West, and “Project 877” in Russia, are formidable weapon platforms, but have a reputation for being difficult to operate. They were the first submarines to be acquired, covered fully by anechoic rubber tiles and had a reputation for running silently in combat.

Cry of despair
The Indian Navy never fielded a “Kilo” in joint naval exercises with other navies for precisely that reason and their reputation remains an undisclosed secret. Their role in war in South Asia is all the more formidable being armed with supersonic land attack missiles that can be used punitively or to influence the course of events on land.

If submarining is a demanding profession, it is partly because a submarine emergency is truly a terrible event, particularly when it occurs in a submerged submarine. The Sindhuratna faced such an event a hundred miles west of Mumbai, and put into practice the hours of drilling that submarine crews undergo, while dealing with emergencies. The “Kilo” has a high resistance to flooding and fire as it is divided into watertight compartments. A damage control drill requires a damaged compartment to be “isolated” and the unspoken anxiety is, of course, the fate of the crew who are isolated. In Sindhuratna’s case, all the events are yet to be clarified, but it seems that two officers, both with brilliant service records, pushed the sailors out of the stricken compartment, and shut the compartment on themselves to fight the fire. Both succumbed to the fumes in an act of cold-blooded gallantry. The Sindhuratna survived the fire and will be back in service in a few months, but the Navy’s front line strength of submarines will be depleted.

The accident raises issues that go beyond the gallantry and competence exhibited by the crew of the submarine. The resignation of a serving chief, with more than 15 months of residual service, is a traumatic event for the service.

It is normally not only an act of honourable exit but a cry of despair, signalling to the service and the government that he was not permitted to hold himself to the same standards as those he demanded from his officers.

Since 1952, the services have laboured under a dysfunctional government “Rules of Business” which declares that the Ministry of Defence, under the secretary, is responsible for the Defence of India — not the armed forces, and certainly not the chiefs. Under this excuse, the services have the accountability; the Ministry has the power to create innumerable hurdles in the path of each service getting financial approval for anything from a battery to a ship. There is good reason to believe that the Sindhuratna was operating with over-aged batteries which give off vast amounts of explosive hydrogen, because the replacement batteries were held up in contractual red tape. The Board of Inquiry will bring out the truth but is unlikely to apportion blame to the Ministry of Defence, whose lackadaisical performance has crippled more than one armed service in the past.

Series of delays
Questions arise that can only be answered by persons well above the level of the service Board of Inquiry, headed by a Rear Admiral. Why was the Navy forced into operating a 26-year-old submarine with over-aged batteries? Because the replacement submarines — the Scorpène class French-origin submarines — were six years in the choosing under Defence Minister A.K. Antony, and were thereafter delayed by another four years contractually on account of the Ministry’s decision-making.

The Chief of the Navy has taken full “moral” responsibility, but his act is more a cry of despair that he has been unable to represent the interests of his service with an unresponsive and callous ministry which has been warned repeatedly by the Naval Headquarters of the depleting force levels of submarines in the Navy. The government had, many years back, approved the Navy’s plans for a 24-submarine force as the ideal. Considering that in peacetime, no more than 60 per cent of submarines can be kept operational, the levels today have fallen to parlous numbers. In past instances, the resignation of a service chief has prodded unresponsive governments into reviewing its policies and procedures. In the Indian case, the Naresh Chandra committee report is still in limbo, according to the same Ministry of Defence.

Going nuclear
What can be done by the government to honour the sacrifice of Admiral D.K. Joshi and not merely send him on pension? Building of the Scorpène class is in progress but six submarines will join the Navy only by 2022. An immediate step could be the acquisition of two more nuclear submarines of the Akula class on lease from Russia. The Russians were willing to lease another submarine in any case following the handing over of the INS Chakra, but considering the good relationship between the Russian and Indian navies it might be possible to persuade President Putin to part with two more Akulas, until the Indian indigenous building project catches up. The only major navies still operating conventional submarines are China and Japan. The others have shifted to an all-nuclear submarine force and India should go down the same route. In the vast reaches of the Indian Ocean, the slow pace of transit of conventional submarines make them a liability, which can only be overcome by acquiring larger numbers. A far more elegant solution is the nuclear propelled SSN, which is normally twice as expensive as a conventional submarine but is far more effective than two conventional boats.

The indigenous route to nuclear SSNs is some years away since SSNs require more powerful reactor plants than the missile-armed Arihant. India’s submarine community also needs to arrive at an intellectual consensus on the merits of transiting to an all nuclear submarine force and communicating that decision to the government. The government on its part needs to help the Indian shipbuilding industry and the Department of Atomic Energy by looking for strategic partnerships involving the building of nuclear propelled submarines — an activity not under the purview of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

In the decades to come, the Navy will become the prime service as India dumps its anxieties over territorial integrity and pursues its global self-interest. The Navy must also shift its strategic thinking from antiquated ideas of coastal defence and a Karachi blockade to an oceanic maritime strategy that is in line with India’s status in the region and its interests overseas. A good beginning was the seminar on nuclear submarines conducted in Visakhapatnam by the Commander-in-Chief to help the submarine community come to grips with future submarine policy. The Navy must now speak with one voice in favour of nuclear submarines.

Sindhuratna and beyond - The Hindu
 
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INS Sindhuratna incident exposes technical frailties of naval vessels

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The Indian Navy is continuing to move from one mishap to another as a major fire broke out in Russian-built quarter century old diesel-electric submarine INS Sindhuratna on February 26 morning about a hundred nautical miles from Mumbai – the tenth accident involving the IN assets and the third involving a submarine.

The navy lost two young officers, Lieutenant Commander Kapish Muwal and Lieutenant Manoranjan Kumar, who were choked to death, while 29 other sailors and technical staff, including the commander, and were injured in the mishap.

The Sindhuratna mishap triggered unprecedented fallout as hours later the Indian Naval chief Admiral Devendra Kumar Joshi resigned owning up moral responsibility for the spate of accidents. The Indian Ministry of Defence showed an uncanny haste in accepting Joshi’s resignation indicating that he might have been nudged by the ministry to put in his papers. For his part, Defence Minister AK Antony asserted that he had consulted ‘everybody’, including Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, before accepting Joshi’s resignation.

Joshi is the first Indian military head to have resigned for an act for which he was not directly responsible. He still had 15 months to go before his superannuation. Eastern Naval Commander Vice Admiral Anil Chopra is believed to be the frontrunner to succeed Joshi as the navy chief and his chances are said to be brighter than Acting Navy Chief Vice Admiral Robin Dhowan.

Sindhuratna was the fifth in the series of ten Kilo-class submarines bought from the Soviet Union/Russia between 1985 and 2000. The ageing boat was commissioned in November 1988 in Russia’s Nizhny Novogorod and underwent a refit at the naval dockyard in Mumbai for six months ending December 2013 in keeping with India’s recent thrust on self-reliance.

Distinct takeaway for the Russians

There is a distinct takeaway for the Russians in the Sindhuratna episode which has uncanny similarities with the INS Sindhurakshak accident on August 14, 2013 midnight.

Both the subs were Russian-built and were being prepared for deployment after undergoing intensive retro-fitting – Sindhuratna locally while Sindhurakshak in Russia.

Sindhurakshak was docked in the Mumbai naval dockyard at the time of the accident, while Sindhuratna was a hundred nautical miles from the Mumbai coast; but both the boats were within the jurisdiction and operational control of the western naval command.

In both the cases, the mishap was triggered in the battery pit because of the leaking batteries.

But unlike the Sindhurakshak, the Sindhuratna was not armed with lethal missiles and torpedoes as the Indian Navy personnel were checking INS Sindhuratna for sea-worthiness after the refit. This is what prevented a much bigger disaster as eighty personnel were onboard when thick smoke started bellowing out from Sindhuratna. In the case of Sindhurakshak, fire reached the missiles and torpedoes section, triggering a series of explosions which eventually sank and destroyed the submarine.

INS Sindhurakshak is still lying at the sea floor and an expensive salvage operation is still being planned.

The latest mishap involving INS Sindhuratna may well favour the Russians as it exposes the technical frailties of the Indian Navy and puts a laser beam focus on the ineptitude of the Indian Navy. The Russians had promptly offered to help in the Sindhurakshak accident investigations, but India has not availed of this offer and kept the Russians out of the probe.

INS Sindhuratna incident exposes technical frailties of naval vessels | idrw.org
 
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Submarine mishap: FM says Def Min should spend wisely

In a arise of new submarine mishap, Finance Minister P Chidambaram was currently questioned by an NSUI member claiming to be sister of one of victims over a sustenance of sufficient supports to a Defence Ministry though he suggested that a armed army were not spending “wisely”.

Chidambaram blamed a Navy for a incident, observant upkeep of a submarine seemed to have been neglected and that he was “sorry” for a fumble and detriment of lives.

He insisted that a Finance Ministry provides “a lot of money” to a Defence Ministry and “I unequivocally wish that a counterclaim army will learn a doctrine and make certain that a income allotted to them is spent some-more wisely and some-more well on essential matters.”

At a duty organized by Congress’ tyro wing NSUI here, a lady pronounced Lt Commander Kapish Muwal, who died in a fumble on INS Sindhuratna, was his hermit and asked Chidambaram “why a supervision is not supporting income for confidence and safety” as casualties are holding place.

She also referred to a falling of another submarine INS Sindhurakshak a few months behind and pronounced a ships are going for refits as a armed army face necessity of finances.

Rejecting a notice that adequate finances are not supposing for a armed forces, Chidambaram said, “As distant as counterclaim output is concerned, we consider it is not scold to contend that adequate income is not being provided. There is no such thing as ‘enough’.”

He argued that a government’s mandate are vast and a Finance Ministry requires income for several departments and purposes. “And for defence, trust me, we have supposing a limit volume that we can,” he insisted.

Chidambaram remarkable that this time a Finance Ministry has allocated Rs 2.25 lakh crore for a defence, that is a “lot of money”.

Submarine mishap: FM says Def Min should spend wisely | idrw.org
 
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