Business Standard

Chinese unmanned tanks pose a new threat

- AJAI SHUKLA

In 1962, even strong Indian Army defences in sectors such as Ladakh and Walong were eventually overrun by human waves of Chinese soldiers. The scenario for a future war is now even bleaker — with the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) throwing in waves of unmanned tanks to blast and crush Indian defences.

Footage recently aired by the stateowned China Central Television (CCTV) showed China’s first unmanned tank being driven by remote control. While the footage did not show the tank’s main gun or other weapons firing, Indian armour experts believe that capability would only be a matter of time.

In July 2014, the China Daily website quoted a senior military officer who divulged that the PLA had begun developing an unmanned armoured vehicle. A month earlier, state-owned defence contractor, China North Industries Group Corp, had establishe­d the country’s first research centre dedicated to developing unmanned ground vehicles.

Highlighti­ng China’s formidable military design and developmen­t capability, that project has apparently achieved its first goal — to drive a tank by remote control. While driverless technologi­es are being developed by civilian corportion­s such as Google, an unmanned tank would present purely military challenges as well — like networking it with surveillan­ce devices, detecting enemy targets, aiming its powerful main gun, and firing it accurately.

“Unmanned ground vehicles will play a very important role in future ground combat. Realising that, we have begun to explore how to refit our armoured vehicles into unmanned ones,” said Major General Xu Hang in 2014. The PLA general headed the Beijing-based People’s Liberation Army Academy of Armoured Forces Engineerin­g, which has spearheade­d the developmen­t of the unmanned tank prototype.

This is a worrying developmen­t for Indian defence planners who, over the preceding decade, beefed up defences along the Sino-Indian border by moving up two brigades of tanks, each with about 150 T-72 tanks. Now, there is the prospect of these being vastly outnumbere­d by hordes of unmanned Chinese tanks.

A tank is a heavy, armoured vehicle that can move off roads since it has tracks rather than wheels. Its thick steel skin protects its crew — usually a driver, gunner, radio operator and commander — from enemy bullets. Its heavy gun, which can fire armour piercing ammunition to destroy enemy tanks or high explosive shells against infantry out in the open, has earned it the sobriquet “the bully of the battlefiel­d”.

Ever since the tank first appeared — in 1916, in the Battle of the Somme, in World War I — weapons designers have sought to counter the threat it poses. Over the decades, the developmen­t of the armourpier­cing projectile, shoulder-fired rocket propelled grenades, anti-tank guided missiles and the attack helicopter; were all initially hailed as the death-knell of the main battle tank. Yet, all these panaceas were countered by improvemen­ts in the tank’s mobility, firepower, lethality and advances in armour protection. Now, some — including the Chinese — believe the answer to the tank is the unmanned tank.

The PLA could potentiall­y field unmanned tanks in the thousands. The one that appeared on CCTV was a Type 59, of which some 5,000 were in service till the turn of the century, when the PLA began replacing them with the more modern Type 69 and Type 79.

The English-language Chinese daily, Global Times, quoted Liu Qingshan, the chief editor of Tank and Armoured Vehicle, as saying that the Type 59 tank fleet is still well maintained.

However, a future Chinese unmanned tank is unlikely to be based on the T-59 platform. A tank’s key drawback is the weight of its armour, which impedes its speed and mobility. Because the armour is mainly needed to protect the crew, removing humans from the equation permits a much more thinly armoured (and lighter) tank.

The future unmanned tank, therefore, is likely to be thinly protected, destructiv­e in firepower and heavily networked through digital networks with airborne and ground-based surveillan­ce devices that provides the tank fleet with an allround view of the battlefiel­d.

In India, the Defence R&D Organisati­on (DRDO) is still focusing on developing the next-generation manned tank. The PLA however is looking further ahead.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? The Indo-China border at Bumla in Arunachal Pradesh. Indian defence planners have beefed up defences by moving up two brigades of tanks
PHOTO: REUTERS The Indo-China border at Bumla in Arunachal Pradesh. Indian defence planners have beefed up defences by moving up two brigades of tanks

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