REBUILDING THE SHIELD
— Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery
The
slumbering defense establishment of India was jolted awake on December 17, 1995
when a Russian AN-26 plane with a Latvian crew and passengers that included a
British arms dealer and a Danish smuggler flew over West Bengal, dropped 2,500
AK-47 rifles and 1,500,000 rounds of ammunition over five villages in the
Purulia district and flew off to Thailand. Though these men were later arrested
when they attempted to fly a return flight to Europe using Indian airspace, the
very fact that a slow lumbering cargo plane had managed to airdrop such a large
cache of weapons without getting detected by Indian air force units was a
wakeup call to the military & a massive embarrassment for the Indian air
force & the then INC India govt under PV Narasimha Rao.
The massive
gap in air defense & Radar that the Purulia arms drop exposed meant that
our shield was broken & that if India had to enter into a major conflict
large swathes of territory would be free game for enemy aircraft to come &
go at will. This was the catalyst that kick started a multi decade long plan to
upgrade & augment the Radar Detection & SAM interdiction capabilities
of the IAF. The first thing done was to look at improving and augmenting the
radar coverage; the INDRA radar developed by the LRDE (Electronics & radar
development establishment) in the 1980’s was upgraded to the INDRA 2 &
deployed. India also approached Israel with a proposal to buy multiple units of
the Arrow Anti-ballistic missile defence system in 1999. A purchase of the
entire system was denied by the US which was a major partner in the project ,
however India did managed to procure two units of the “Green Pine” High power
AESA Radar from Israel. These initial steps have now given rise to the
Indigenous “Swordfish “AESA that lies at the core of our BMD. One unit of the
Swordfish has been deployed as per media reports dated 2015. The LRDE also
developed the ROHINI 3D Central acquisition radar which is currently under
acquisition.
In 2010 the Indian air force formally inaugurated operations
of the AFNET & IACCS. This system was in development or over a decade &
now interlinks all civilian and military radars including AWACS to provide air
defence commanders with a real time multi layered picture detailing civilian
and military aircraft movement throughout India & much of the subcontinent
as well. The Indian Air Force has already established 5 IACCS
nodes in the western sector facing Pakistan at Barnala (Punjab), Wadsar
(Gujarat), Aya Nagar (Delhi), Jodhpur (Rajasthan) and Ambala (Haryana). Four
new major nodes and 10 new sub-nodes are in the process of being raised under
Phase-II of the IACCS project. While 3 nodes will be deployed in eastern,
central and southern India, the fourth is meant for the strategically-located
Andaman and Nicobar Islands archipelago in the Bay of Bengal, watching over
Malacca Strait.
While augmenting its surveillance capabilities
the IAF was well aware that it had only resolved part of the puzzle, the
question of interdiction of any hostile aircraft these radars would detect
would mean newer and better air defence missiles & guns would be required
as well. The workhorse of the IAF Sam fleet then was the SA-3 Gammon which with
its 35km range was simply outclassed by the 4&4+ Gen aircraft then being
acquired by our opposition. The IAF then embarked on a plan to develop &
acquire an entirely new series of SAMs more suited to modern combat which led
to the Akash program being sped up. The Indian military also acquired the
SPYDER LLQRM from Israel while ordering AKASH SAM units from BDL. A national
BMD development program was also started by DRDO alongside JV programs for air
defense missiles with MBDA of Europe and IAI OF Israel. The Israeli JV
developed the MRSAM system 18 units of which are currently on order. While
these entire Surface to Air missile programs would be able to intercept
airborne threats at the medium to short range the lack of capability for a long
range intercept was still present. The option of the S400 was brought in to
counter this deficiency.
In October
2015 India formally announced an intention to purchase the S400 system from
Russia as a direct deal, though the initial requirement for 12 such systems was
pared down to only 5 on account of costs. On 05/10/2018 Prime Minister Modi of
India and President Putin of Russia signed in a deal that will see Russia
supply 5 units of the strategic Air defense missile system S400 delivered to
India for use by the Indian Air Force starting 2020. This system along with the
BARAK 8 (deliveries from 2020) will in many ways usher in a paradigm shift for
the IAF which till date has utilized surface to air missiles as mere point and
area defense weapons with maximum ranges of engagement from 18 to 45km. There
is some information from CASIS about a possible transfer to India of two S200
class 150km ranged missile systems in 1989 but without official acknowledgement
it is safe to assume the IAF cannot engage airborne targets form the ground at
greater than 45km ranges as on date.
The S400
system will give the SAM crews in the IAF “strategic” reach & for the first
time allow a SAM system to be used as an offensive asset instead of a simple
defensive weapon. This will mean that now a SAM crew sitting in Ambala will be
able to kill a ZDK-03 AWACS or an IL-78 tanker of the PAF flying over Islamabad
if called upon to do so using the 40N6 missile. However the 40N6 is a strategic
weapon & will not be used regularly. The 48N6, 9M96E2 &9M96E missiles
of the S400 will be the workhorse missiles & do most of the heavy lifting
defending Indian airspace from arrange of 40-240km.
The S400 system coupled with the “SWORDFISH”
BMD radar and AAD+PAD combo will also give India a multi layered anti-ballistic
missile defence capability & should form the core of our national Air
defence for a number of decades to come. This formidable system will be the tip
of the sword for the IAF air defense and the longest ranged anti-aircraft asset
in a multilayered air defense network comprising of the indigenous BMD system,
S400, MRSAM, AKASH & SPYDER apart from older assets like the SA-3 & OSA
SAM systems. Apart from recent media reports about the possible acquisition of
an American NASAMS2 system an indigenous QRSAM & LRSAM called XRSAM are in the
works as well. India is also upgrading its entire arsenal of AAA guns with
modern fire control radar & electro -optical target acquisition systems.
It is safe
to say that with the acquisition of the S400 we are close to achieving the near
zero gap air defence coverage which we had planned for since the 1990’s Purulia
airdrop Incident. Our skies have never been this secure.
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