Business Standard

MoD clears ~35-bn rifle purchase

- AJAI SHUKLA More on business-standard.com

The defence ministry has gone back to the start line in procuring a basic weapon for the army’s infantry battalions – the footsoldie­rs who make up the bulk of the army, defend or capture territory in war and carry out counter-insurgency duties in peace.

After an earlier procuremen­t was aborted last year after years of fruitless trials, the defence ministry announced on Tuesday its go-ahead for re-starting the procuremen­t of 72,400 assault rifles and 93,895 carbines, worth an estimated ~35.47 billion.

This is a fraction of the one million rifles and carbines that will be needed to re-equip the entire army. However, the ministry said it would “enable the Defence Forces to meet their immediate requiremen­t for the troops deployed on the borders.”

The ministry’s apex procuremen­t body, the Defence Acquisitio­n Council (DAC), headed by Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, cleared this procuremen­t under the “fast track basis”, which requires a contract to be concluded in less than six months and delivery of weapons within a year of signing the contract.

As this newspaper first reported (November 4, Infantry to get foreign rifles, others to get ‘made in India’), the army – struggling to make do with a strained procuremen­t budget – decided against importing the army’s entire requiremen­t of 800,000 assault rifles. Instead, it would cut costs by importing only 250,000 assault rifles for about ~200,000 each; and ask the Defence R&D Organisati­on (DRDO) and the Ordnance Factory Board (OFB) to design and build the remaining 550,000 rifles in the country. An indigenous rifle, it is estimated, would cost less than half an imported one.

It is still unclear whether the remaining 1,77,600 assault rifles needed for frontline infantry would be imported, or manufactur­ed in India with technology transferre­d by a foreign vendor.

Rawat raised that possibilit­y, stating: “Let us see if this imported weapon can subsequent­ly be manufactur­ed in India also by our own industry.”

Meanwhile, the DRDO is continuing perfecting the indigenous INSAS 1C rifle, and the OFB is separately developing another rifle it calls the Ghatak. These weapons are still to pass army trials. Once these new weapons are introduced, the army will simultaneo­usly juggle two different weapon philosophi­es. The frontline infantry’s heavy 7.62 x 51 millimetre rifle will be optimised for convention­al war, with a longer range and heavier bullets that kill or completely incapacita­te enemy soldiers that they strike. These rifles will also be equipped with reflex sights and modern night vision sights.

The indigenous weapons that will arm soldiers other than frontline infantry, will be lighter 5.56 x 45 millimetre weapons, optimised for counter-insurgency operations, with smaller bullets that soldiers can carry in larger numbers.

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