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Why Indian Navy needs fewer INS Kochis

Zarvan

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300px-Indian_Navy_Ship_INS_Kochi.jpg


SANDEEP UNNITHAN


The guided missile destroyer INS Kochi that joined the Indian Navy in Mumbai on September 30 is a fearsome combatant. This 7400-tonne warship bristles with supersonic cruise missiles, two multi-role helicopters, long range anti-aircraft missiles, guns and torpedoes. This is the reason every Admiral would want to have several such powerful floating arsenals in his fleet. The Indian Navy sees itself fielding a force of 150 warships by 2027. A bulk of these warships will be frigates and destroyers like the INS Kochi capable of neutralising enemy aircrafts, warships, submarines and attacking targets on land and escorting merchant vessels transiting near enemy waters. However, the last major naval conflict was over three decades ago, in the Falklands.

Peacetime mission for the Indian naval fleet includes overseas diplomatic flag-flying missions: in the past year, the Navy has sent its warships to 40 countries across the globe; has been patrolling the Indian coastline to prevent 26/11-type terror attacks, providing humanitarian assistance missions like the rescue of over 4,000 Indian nationals stranded in Yemen and, since 2008, the deployment of one warship in the Gulf of Aden to counter Somali pirates.

There are time and cost constraints in achieving a fleet size the Navy wants. Each Kolkata/Kochi class destroyer costs over Rs 4,000 crore to build. The Navy can afford only a limited number of such warships. Expensive combat platforms will always be subject to the vagaries of budget cuts. This year, the NDA downsized the IAF’s (Indian AirForce) ginormous $20 billion proposal to buy 126 twin-engined Rafale fighter jets, to a modest buy of just 36 aircrafts for $4 billion. There is another instructive lesson in the IAF’s Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) tender that the Rafale won. The MMRCA project began in 1999 as a modest buy of 126 single-engined Mirage 2000 aircrafts.

The Navy currently has five Project 15 "city class" destroyers which it has been inducting rather slowly since 1997. Current plans call for adding ten more such expensive destroyers, costing upwards of $1 billion, by 2027 or at an ambitious rate of one warship a year.

It is unlikely the Mumbai-based public sector shipyard Mazagon Docks Ltd (MDL) can handle this rate of construction. The MDL takes upwards of five years to build a destroyer like the INS Kochi because of inadequate investment in modern ship construction technology. That’s not good news for the Navy which is struggling to replace its ageing warships.

There is a far more cost-effective option within the Navy: the Naval Offshore Patrol Vessel (NOPV) or the INS Saryu class of vessels, four of which are in service. These 2,300-tonne warships are armed with 76 mm main guns, two 30 mm cannons, a helicopter and carry marine commandos. Its economical diesel engines boast of an impressive range of 6,000 nautical miles. Compared to the city class destroyers, the NOPVs are dirt cheap. For the price of one Kochi destroyer, the Navy can buy nine NOPVs. It takes just 36 months to build one such vessel which can perform all the Navy’s peacetime constabulary and flag-showing roles. They can also be used for escort duties in wartime by adding modular plug and play weapon packages — containerised missiles and towed array sonars — which can dramatically increase their combat profile. NOPVs will allow the Navy to field dozens of such inexpensive warships in quantities which will give them a quality of their own.

The trouble is, the Navy is not buying enough NOPVs. It plans to field only nine vessels as opposed to over 20 pricey frigates and destroyers.

This is possibly because, as Robert Kaplan notes in his book Monsoon, the Indian Navy, like the Chinese Navy, is preparing to fight titanic doomsday sea battles which are increasingly unlikely to happen.

Why Indian Navy needs fewer INS Kochis
 
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Every Tom Dick and Harry considers himself better placed than the organisation which is responsible for securing the interests of India.

Would love to see this columnist volunteer for on board journey on some NOPV when Chinese subs lurks just between Indian mainland and Andman's EEZ while border is tense.

If you can't take it to enemy, self defence isn't of much deterrence. Bite back is necessary.
 
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Where did the OP find this article

It looks a blog post written by a communist

People need to understand that their is a generational difference between Delhi class and Kolkata class
Hence the nomenclature P15 vs P15A
The Delhi class were share more similarities with the older Rajput class which the P15B will replace, rather than the Kolkata class
 
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Just I want to ask this moron to prove me that how Indian navy will feace plaaf without less ins kochis???????
 
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Every Tom Dick and Harry considers himself better placed than the organisation which is responsible for securing the interests of India.

Would love to see this columnist volunteer for on board journey on some NOPV when Chinese subs lurks just between Indian mainland and Andman's EEZ while border is tense.

If you can't take it to enemy, self defence isn't of much deterrence. Bite back is necessary.

HE HE LOLZ the author will pee in his pants if he a fake news of PLAN is coming to target India.
the source of this article is from dailyyo.com

INS Astradharini Joins The Indian Navy
 
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So this fella wants to substitute Naval Offshore Patrol Vessels (NOPV) for Destroyers of the Kochi class? :woot: That's comparing apples to oranges! He should be aware that their roles are totally different!
 
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Perhaps,he doesn't know there is something called Indian Coast Guard.. :rofl::rofl:
 
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Perhaps,he doesn't know there is something called Indian Coast Guard.. :rofl::rofl:
No he thinks Destroyer is only for transporting people during crisis. So his calculation says why to have one ship which is so costly instead buy 10 bhai Maal to jayda uthayega. In other word instead of buying Car buy 100 rikshaw so that instead of 5 person it can take 200 person.
 
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300px-Indian_Navy_Ship_INS_Kochi.jpg


SANDEEP UNNITHAN


The guided missile destroyer INS Kochi that joined the Indian Navy in Mumbai on September 30 is a fearsome combatant. This 7400-tonne warship bristles with supersonic cruise missiles, two multi-role helicopters, long range anti-aircraft missiles, guns and torpedoes. This is the reason every Admiral would want to have several such powerful floating arsenals in his fleet. The Indian Navy sees itself fielding a force of 150 warships by 2027. A bulk of these warships will be frigates and destroyers like the INS Kochi capable of neutralising enemy aircrafts, warships, submarines and attacking targets on land and escorting merchant vessels transiting near enemy waters. However, the last major naval conflict was over three decades ago, in the Falklands.

Peacetime mission for the Indian naval fleet includes overseas diplomatic flag-flying missions: in the past year, the Navy has sent its warships to 40 countries across the globe; has been patrolling the Indian coastline to prevent 26/11-type terror attacks, providing humanitarian assistance missions like the rescue of over 4,000 Indian nationals stranded in Yemen and, since 2008, the deployment of one warship in the Gulf of Aden to counter Somali pirates.

There are time and cost constraints in achieving a fleet size the Navy wants. Each Kolkata/Kochi class destroyer costs over Rs 4,000 crore to build. The Navy can afford only a limited number of such warships. Expensive combat platforms will always be subject to the vagaries of budget cuts. This year, the NDA downsized the IAF’s (Indian AirForce) ginormous $20 billion proposal to buy 126 twin-engined Rafale fighter jets, to a modest buy of just 36 aircrafts for $4 billion. There is another instructive lesson in the IAF’s Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) tender that the Rafale won. The MMRCA project began in 1999 as a modest buy of 126 single-engined Mirage 2000 aircrafts.

The Navy currently has five Project 15 "city class" destroyers which it has been inducting rather slowly since 1997. Current plans call for adding ten more such expensive destroyers, costing upwards of $1 billion, by 2027 or at an ambitious rate of one warship a year.

It is unlikely the Mumbai-based public sector shipyard Mazagon Docks Ltd (MDL) can handle this rate of construction. The MDL takes upwards of five years to build a destroyer like the INS Kochi because of inadequate investment in modern ship construction technology. That’s not good news for the Navy which is struggling to replace its ageing warships.

There is a far more cost-effective option within the Navy: the Naval Offshore Patrol Vessel (NOPV) or the INS Saryu class of vessels, four of which are in service. These 2,300-tonne warships are armed with 76 mm main guns, two 30 mm cannons, a helicopter and carry marine commandos. Its economical diesel engines boast of an impressive range of 6,000 nautical miles. Compared to the city class destroyers, the NOPVs are dirt cheap. For the price of one Kochi destroyer, the Navy can buy nine NOPVs. It takes just 36 months to build one such vessel which can perform all the Navy’s peacetime constabulary and flag-showing roles. They can also be used for escort duties in wartime by adding modular plug and play weapon packages — containerised missiles and towed array sonars — which can dramatically increase their combat profile. NOPVs will allow the Navy to field dozens of such inexpensive warships in quantities which will give them a quality of their own.

The trouble is, the Navy is not buying enough NOPVs. It plans to field only nine vessels as opposed to over 20 pricey frigates and destroyers.

This is possibly because, as Robert Kaplan notes in his book Monsoon, the Indian Navy, like the Chinese Navy, is preparing to fight titanic doomsday sea battles which are increasingly unlikely to happen.

Why Indian Navy needs fewer INS Kochis

63960361.jpg
 
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Stopped reading after that:

This is the reason every Admiral would want to have several such powerful floating arsenals in his fleet.



As much as he is wrong on acquiring AAW frigates/destroyers because India doesn't have a sea connection. It's a wide open blue ocean. So no one would underestimate the need of destroyer combatants. But also he has a point on OPV/Corvettes. That doesn't mean that India should opt for more corvettes (OPV) either. Considering India's geographical location, these corvettes are of course not to guard the entire coastline but rather deployments at India's territorial water border namely, Pakistan, Bangladesh..etc. and more.


Take the United States Navy for example. There are only 4 LCSs in active service right now and the planned procurement in total is 24, bear in mind that US has a very very long coastline to patrol.

It is about Naval strategy, unless the writer has the full spectrum doctrine of Indian Navy, it's an article that needed to be written to fill the daily corner.
 
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Stopped reading after that:





As much as he is wrong on acquiring AAW frigates/destroyers because India doesn't have a sea connection. It's a wide open blue ocean. So no one would underestimate the need of destroyer combatants. But also he has a point on OPV/Corvettes. That doesn't mean that India should opt for more corvettes (OPV) either. Considering India's geographical location, these corvettes are of course not to guard the entire coastline but rather deployments at India's territorial water border namely, Pakistan, Bangladesh..etc. and more.


Take the United States Navy for example. There are only 4 LCSs in active service right now and the planned procurement in total is 24, bear in mind that US has a very very long coastline to patrol.

It is about Naval strategy, unless the writer has the full spectrum doctrine of Indian Navy, it's an article that need to be written to fill the corner.

Ignore that bro.He is just another armchair general to shame entire Indians that spend huge amounts to train perfect naval officers from Naval Academy ,Ezhimala.
 
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Next time this guy wants to travel long distance...he should be given a cycle and asked to travel instead of train or flight tickets coz the cycle is dirt cheap and is also good exercise. Besides he does not have to pay for fuel....if he is taking his family along - he can be given a cycle rickshaw... Fuel and pollution free travel for life
 
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