Business Standard

INDIA SCURRIES TO ASSESS SCORPENE LEAK IMPACT

22,400 pages of sensitive info about submarines leaked

- AJAI SHUKLA New Delhi, 24 August

On Tuesday, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar was informed that an Australian newspaper had reported the leak of 22,400 pages of key operationa­l details of India’s newest submarines, the Scorpene. The leak was apparently from the French shipbuilde­r DCNS, which is the vendor. Upon learning about the leak, Parrikar ordered the navy chief to personally inquire into what this meant for the security of the Scorpene fleet. “Let him (the navy chief) first find out all the details. That is a sort of inquiry, directly asking a navy chief to find out… and identify what is (the problem).”

At midnight on Tuesday, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar was woken up by a phone call informing him that an Australian newspaper had just reported the leak of key operationa­l details of India’s newest submarines, the Scorpene.

A short while earlier, The Australian, a Melbourne-based daily, had broken the news that 22,400 pages of detailed documents relating to India’s Scorpene submarines had been leaked, apparently from the French shipbuilde­r DCNS, which is the vendor for India’s six Scorpenes.

The report says: “the DCNS documents detail the most sensitive combat capabiliti­es of India’s new $3-billion submarine fleet and would provide an intelligen­ce bonanza if obtained by India’s strategic rivals, such as Pakistan or China.”

Each page of the documents, available on The Australian’s website, is annotated in red with the stamp: “Restricted Scorpene India”.

Parrikar says, upon learning about the leak, he ordered the navy chief to personally inquire into what this meant for the security of the Scorpene fleet.

Asked whether a formal inquiry was under way, Parrikar replied: “Let him (the navy chief) first find out all the details. That is a sort of inquiry, directly asking a navy chief to find out… and identify what is (the problem).”

“The available informatio­n is being examined at Integrated Headquarte­rs, Ministry of Defence (Navy) and an analysis is being carried out by the concerned specialist­s,” said a defence ministry release on Wednesday morning.

Asked by Business Standard whether DCNS was in breach of confidenti­ality clauses, Parrikar said: “What I understand is that there is a hacking (from DCNS). We will find out all those things… maybe in a couple of days we will be able to tell you.”

“It appears that the source of the leak is from overseas and not in India,” says the defence ministry release.

Industry sources say the timing of the leak is significan­t, with DCNS having won a $50-billion tender in April to design a new submarine fleet for Australia, beating German and Japanese rivals. There is speculatio­n that rivals might be scuttling DCNS’s bid by painting it as unreliable.

Even so, the Indian Navy is seriously concerned about the leak. The Australian says the leaked data includes details of the Indian Scorpenes’ stealth capabiliti­es, frequencie­s for intelligen­ce gathering, noise levels of the submarines at various speeds, diving depths, range and endurance, magnetic, electro-magnetic and infra-red data, specificat­ions of the torpedo system, propeller noise specificat­ions and radiated noise levels when the submarine surfaces. This includes sensitive capabiliti­es that an enemy would find useful in formulatin­g combat tactics.

The first of India’s six Scorpene submarines, a dieselelec­tric vessel named INS Kalvari, is currently undergoing sea trials off Mumbai. Mazagon Dock, Mumbai (MDL), which is building six vessels with technology transferre­d from DCNS, expects the Kalvari to be commission­ed into the navy by year-end. Over the next three years, the remaining five Scorpenes will be commission­ed and enter active service.

Parrikar says he hopes key informatio­n might have been firewalled from the DCNS leaks by being confined to MDL.

Arun Kumar Singh, viceadmira­l (Retired) and a submarine veteran, explains that much of the informatio­n in the leaked pages would be commercial informatio­n relating to the Scorpene’s operating characteri­stics, that DCNS would legitimate­ly share with any navy that expressed interest in buying the Scorpene.

“An operationa­l disaster, however, would be the leakage of informatio­n relating to the sound that the Scorpene radiates into the water; or revealing the maximum depth to which the vessel can dive and fire weapons from”, says Singh.

A submarine’s “audio signature” is like a fingerprin­t. It is unique, and allows sensors like those in maritime reconnaiss­ance aircraft to identify individual submarines, from a bank of “signatures” that navies maintain.

INS Kalvari has not yet done its “noise ranging trials”, which would pinpoint its audio fingerprin­t. Until these trials are completed, there is little possibilit­y of it falling into the wrong hands.

Scorpene submarines are operated by Malaysia and Chile, while Brazil will also operate them from 2018. The Indian Scorpene is slightly longer, which would make its audio and magnetic signatures slightly different. Interestin­gly, the leak would also be carefully scrutinise­d by Pakistan, which has bought three submarines from DCNS, the Agosta 90B class. There are several commonalit­ies between the Scorpene and the Agosta 90B, although the latter incorporat­es the more sophistica­ted “air independen­t propulsion”.

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 ??  ?? (Above) A file photo of Scorpene submarine. (Right) A copy of the leaked document, in which sensitive informatio­n has been redacted by The Australian
(Above) A file photo of Scorpene submarine. (Right) A copy of the leaked document, in which sensitive informatio­n has been redacted by The Australian

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