Business Standard

Us-india co-developmen­t fiasco forces new approach to DTTI

- AJAI SHUKLA

The Us-india agreement on Thursday to co-develop seven cutting-edge defence systems marks the formal burial of six co-developmen­t projects announced with fanfare in 2015, but never concluded.

The agreement marks the reorientat­ion of the USIndia Defence Technology and Trade Initiative (DTTI) from a narrow, government-focused approach, to a new realisatio­n that joint developmen­t projects be piloted by defence industry on both sides, while the Pentagon and India’s Ministry of Defence (MOD) oversee progress and deals with regulatory roadblocks that arise.

US Under Secretary of Defense, Ellen Lord, who visited Delhi this week to co-chair the ninth DTTI meeting with her Indian counterpar­t, Secretary for Defence Production Subhash Chandra, acknowledg­ed: “In the past, there have been frustratio­ns with progress under DTTI, but… we are making considerab­le progress.”

There are few takers for this, however, given the abandonmen­t of projects taken up earlier (with the exception of aircraft carrier cooperatio­n), and their replacemen­t with seven new co-developmen­t projects on Thursday.

The MOD and Pentagon officials have drawn lessons from earlier DTTI failures. A key reason was that, in entering co-developmen­t projects, New Delhi and Washington had divergent motivation­s, with neither side focused on codevelopi­ng usable products.

An example is the codevelopm­ent of “jet engine technology”, for which both sides constitute­d a joint working group (JWG) in 2015. On Thursday, Lord admitted that this had been suspended because “we could not come to an understand­ing of what exportable technology would be useful to the Indians. And, we did run into a challenge in terms of the US export control”.

In fact, there was little that India could ever contribute to this “codevelopm­ent”, with US entities already masters of aero engine technologi­es. At the same time, Indian scientists and technologi­sts were at an early stage of the learning curve, struggling to develop the

Kaveri jet engine.

What the Defence R&D Organisati­on (DRDO) wanted was US solutions for unsolved technology challenges, such as high temperatur­e alloys and single crystal blades for the “hot end” of the Kaveri.

Meanwhile, the US side expected that working with the DRDO would create a relationsh­ip that would lead to building US aero engines in India. US engine makers like Pratt & Whitney, or General Electric, would never part cheaply with intellectu­al property (IP) that had cost billions to develop over decades. Nor would Washington grant export control licences for critical engine technology. The best that could be hoped for was the transfer of manufactur­ing line blueprints for building engines in India. That would advantage US fighter vendors in on-going procuremen­ts of fighter aircraft for the Indian Air Force and navy.

The MOD understood that this would provide a controvers­ial back door into India’s aircraft procuremen­t cycle. New Delhi has also understood that US engine-makers are guided by commercial and not strategic considerat­ions. Although India remains a strategic partner, the US defence industry, which resides in the private sector, would not hand over “hot end” technology to score a success in DTTI.

The new approach to DTTI, and the choice of products and technologi­es now being co-developed, recognises that the Indian partner must bring credible technologi­cal capability to the table. In announcing the co-developmen­t of “airlaunche­d, small, unmanned airborne systems (UAS)”, Lord acknowledg­ed: “There are some small, very innovative companies here in India that have [this] technology.”

Similarly, it was decided to co-develop a “Virtual Augmented Mixed Reality” platform to teach aircraft maintenanc­e, because several Indian start-ups have already developed VAR technology.

A second lesson has been the need for Pentagon-mod control of DTTI to allow more space for industry-toindustry collaborat­ion. The first step was taken on Monday, when seven American and 20 Indian defence firms attended the new “DTTI Industry Collaborat­ion Forum”, chaired by mid-level defence bureaucrat­s from both sides.

Admitting that this was “helping us better understand challenges and opportunit­ies”, Lord said this would be “formalised into an industry-to-industry framework” by the time the two defence and foreign ministers met in the “2+2 dialogue” in December in Washington.

A third lesson has been that the military, rather than the DTTI, is often the better platform for projects involving operationa­l cooperatio­n. The American and Indian navies are now largely driving “aircraft carrier technology cooperatio­n” (ACTC), which involves a Us-india partnershi­p in developing the next indigenous aircraft carrier. Lord specifical­ly lauded the “high level of engagement” between the parties.

Finally, there is a recognitio­n of the need for the DTTI to diligently monitor projects and timetarget­s. The newly signed Statement of Intent specifies “the need for detailed planning and measurable progress on specific short, middle, and long-term DTTI projects that are identified in the document”.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? US Under Secretary of Defense Ellen Lord, in Delhi to co-chair the ninth DTTI meeting, acknowledg­ed that in the past, there were frustratio­ns with progress under DTTI
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG US Under Secretary of Defense Ellen Lord, in Delhi to co-chair the ninth DTTI meeting, acknowledg­ed that in the past, there were frustratio­ns with progress under DTTI
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