Bhartiya Vayu Sena is the air wing of
the Bharatiya armed forces; it has always performed its due with vigil and
attention. In modern times the air forces of other nation are adapting rapidly as compared to their Bharatiya
counterpart in the term of aircraft number and modernization.
*Bharatiya Air force has the strength
of 1,27,000 active personal as per the data of the Military Balance 2010, the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). According to Flight Global estimates there are around 1588 aircrafts in the service with IAF.
The Bharatiya
Raksha Mantralaya heavily depends upon the military relation with Russia, the erstwhile USSR. Russia has been the prime supplier of the defense equipment to Bharatiya
armed forces. Bhartiya Vayu Sena is no exception. The majority of the fleet comprises of MIG
-21, MIG -29, Sukhoi (SU) 30 MKI with one or two exception in the form of Mirage
2000 (French) and the famed HAL HF-24 and HAL Tejas (both more or less
“tractors with wings that don’t fly”). In
the span of nearly 60 years Hindustan Aeronautics Limited [ HAL ] is able to
deliver only two fighter aircrafts from its stable. The most overhyped aircraft of modern times,
HAL Tejas, has been inducted recently in the month of Januar 2015. As far as the modernization of the air force
of various countries is concerned Bhartiya Vayu Sena is actually moving at a
snail’s pace. It is imperative on the
part of Hindustan Aeronautics Limited [HAL] to come up with defense equipments
to suffice the needs of Bharatiya armed forces. HAL has been involved in the preparation of fifth
generation fighter aircraft, but these preparations are yet to see the shining
light.
For the layman public, please
understand that “fifth generation fighter” are the most advanced fighter jets
developed so far and the one and only one so far inducted into any Air Force is
the F-22 Raptor inducted by the US Air Force in 2005 and manufactured by
Lockheed Martin. Many countries
including Russia and China are trying frantically to develop a similar one but
those are still under testing/prototype stages (Russia is making the Su PAK FA
while China is making the Chengdu J-20 and Shenyang J-31). The best part of these countries is that
these air crafts do actually fly! (No puns intended please)
So coming back to our point; the
defense spending is at an all-time high, it is quite obvious to have large
defense budget for a country like Bharat. However this budget could have been curtailed
to an extent if the government defense manufacturers would have performed at
least to the extent to which they are being paid for. It may seem bitter to the people sitting in
those establishments to read this but these are the hard facts which needs to
be embraced and corrective action need to be taken.
Number
crunching - pure mathematics: Are you
joking Mr. Nobody?
Si no
|
Name
|
Unit Cost
|
Nos
|
Amount
|
1
|
Dassault
Rafale
|
$ 101
million
|
100
|
$ 10.10
billion
|
2
|
HAL
Tejas
|
$ 31 million
|
100
|
$ 3.10 billion
|
Cost of
acquisition of air crafts
In the cost of 100 Rafale
we can purchase at least 300 HAL Tejas but the bone of contention is that our
Tejas is just not battle-ready and cannot perform at par with its peers.
Another interesting story about Tejas is that
during its designing and testing of its engines, the engines were not
performing up to the mark despite pouring in millions of rupees and wasting
around 5-6 years. Finally our brilliant
scientists imported an engine from General Electric Corporation (USA) and just
renamed it as Kaveri engine!
Why is it that our state run defence
manufacturers are unable to come up with the equipments that are of world-class
standards. Nobody is willing to purchase
our defense equipments other than minions like Nepal and Bhutan who just don’t
have the budget or even the requirement to go for heavy mainternational standards. chinery from US or Europe. The most probable reason is that our equipments are just not of
Defence Budgets:
The
following is the data regarding the defence budgets of various countries as a
percentage of their GDP.
Country
|
% of GDP as defence budget
|
Amount
(in dollars)
|
US
|
4
|
106
|
China
|
2.5
|
131
|
Bharat
|
1.74
|
39.8
|
Pakistan
|
3.5
|
N.A.
|
It
is a universally accepted fact that the defense expenditure of 3% is helpful
for the social economic development. The per capita expenditure of Bharat is $10
whereas the average expenditure of the top 10 Asian nations is $800. Similarly the soldier to citizen ratio is 1:22
which is at a lower side. China has
already increased the defense budget by 12.2 % compared to last year. The way PLA has been modernising the defence
shows that Bharat has been doing the same at a snail's pace. In order to restore the balance among the South
East Asian countries or among Asia, it is required for Bharat to modernise the
armed forces at a faster pace.
Enough of the criticism – what is the solution?
- Permit and encourage private
defence players: The examples all
around the world (as stated above) are before you to see. FA-22, F-16, etc. for the USAF has been
made by Lockheed Martin; MIG-29 is made by Migoyan Corporation; Rafale is
manufactured by Dassault Corporation; J-series fighter jets for China are
manufactured by the Chengdu Corporation – WHERE IS THE CORPORATION FOR OUR
BHARAT??? HAL ??? A big NO. The performance of HAL is just not up to
the mark – not much because of the lack of funds but because of the lack
of talent as well as corruption.
The governments efforts towards “Make in India” and creation of SEZ
for setting up defence manufacturing units are totally welcome and should
be encouraged at a faster pace.
- More research should be promoted at the grass-root level, i.e. the
engineering colleges and universities spread across Bharat and good minds
should be nurtured and watered so that they don’t migrate to foreign
shores or end up becoming hopeless civil servants or bankers rather than
the brilliant scientists that they could have been had a proper
environment been given to them.
- Fix accountability at government institutions like HAL, DRDO,
ordinance factories, etc. for not meeting the required targets and make
the documentation process easier.
If scientists are wasting their times in getting monetary
sanctions, then when will they do the research??
The
fact as of now remains that we are not modernising at the level that we are
expected to restore the balance of power in Asia.
In modern times the modernization of
armed forces is need of hour. Probable solution could be
Restrict the purchase of the foreign
defense equipments.
Encourage the Bharatiya private
player in the defense equipment manufacturing market with supervision of
defense ministry. This will create a healthy competition among the Government
defense equipment suppliers. Government should encourage more green field
projects in this area and probably some day we will be able to outperform countries
like Russia, US, and China. Even though these projects will cost us heavily but it is the need of the hour. A complete new industry
will come into the foray in Bharatiya economy. Proper appraisal system should
be in place in these state run defence manufacturers
so that quality of the end product should be ensured. Innovation should be
given the prime importance at these facilities.
When are able to send the CHANDRAYAAN
to the moon, why can’t we have our expert defense equipment manufacturer who
are better than their international counterparts.
A famous military saying goes that Battles are first won in the minds and then on the fields. Perhaps its time to prove our mettle.
Happy ETHMOS