Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Leak of classified info threatens India’s on-order Scorpene subs

‘CAUSE OF CONCERN’ Navy insists vessels not compromise­d, report sought from French shipbuilde­r RESTRICTED DATA

- Rahul Singh and Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: India was scrambling on Wednesday to assess the vulnerabil­ity of its key Scorpene submarines being built in collaborat­ion with a French company after seemingly crucial details of its combat capabiliti­es were leaked.

The government sought a report from French shipbuilde­r DCNS, which bagged the `23,562crore ($3.5 billion) contract for six submarines in 2005, after The Australian newspaper reported that the documents could prove an “intelligen­ce bonanza” for India’s rivals such as Pakistan and China. The leak runs into 22,400 pages. The military establishm­ent insisted that the leak was a “cause of concern” but was not serious enough to compromise the Scorpene submarines. However, an official statement issued by DCNS in Paris acknowledg­ed that the sensitive data made public was a “serious matter”.

“This investigat­ion will determine the exact nature of the leaked documents, the potential Details of stealth, communicat­ion and navigation abilities

The frequencie­s at which the submarines gather intelligen­ce

The levels of noise the submarines make at various speeds

Their diving depths,

“The DNA of a submarine is about not being detected. If the adversary has all that data, it affects the detectabil­ity index of the boat”

CMDRE (RETD) C UDAY BHASKAR, Society for Policy Studies

damages to DCNS customers as well as the responsibi­lities for this leakage,” DCNS said.

Defence minister Manohar Parrikar sought a report from the Indian Navy chief Admiral Sunil Lanba on the “extent of the leak”. Parrikar, who said he learnt of the leak at midnight on range and endurance Magnetic, electromag­netic and infra-red data Specificat­ions of the submarine’s torpedo launch system and combat system

Speed and conditions needed for using the periscope Tuesday, described it as a “case of hacking”.

“The first step is to identify if it’s related to us, and anyway it’s not all 100% leak,” said Parrikar, who also met the navy chief to assess the situation.

The Indian Navy said the source of the leak was apparently “from overseas and not in India”. A naval spokesman said the “available informatio­n is being examined” at the defence ministry and that “an analysis is being carried out by the concerned specialist­s”.

The main opposition Congress demanded a “complete security audit” of the defence ministry following the leak. Party spokesman Randeep Surjewala said the audit should be done by a sitting Supreme Court judge.

India has ordered six Scorpene-class submarines and the first vessel built at Mumbai’s state-run Mazagon Docks began sea trials in May and is expected to be inducted early next year. The Scorpene is expected to become the main convention­al submarine of the Indian fleet and replace the ageing Russian Kilo-class and German HDW vessels that are almost three decades old.

The report in The Australian said the DCNS documents, marked “Restricted Scorpene India”, detail highly classified informatio­n such as the levels of noise the submarines make at various speeds, where the submarine crew can speak safely to avoid detection by the enemy, magnetic, electromag­netic and infra-red data, and noise specificat­ions of the propeller and radiated noise levels when the submarine surfaces.

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 ??  ?? Rescuers look for survivors in Amatrice after an earthquake on Wednesday. The clock in the 16th-century bell tower is frozen at 3.36am, the moment the quake struck. AFP PHOTO
Rescuers look for survivors in Amatrice after an earthquake on Wednesday. The clock in the 16th-century bell tower is frozen at 3.36am, the moment the quake struck. AFP PHOTO
 ??  ?? The first Scorpene-class submarine is set afloat at the naval dockyard in Mumbai, on Oct 29, 2015. VIJAYANAND GUPTA/HT FILE
The first Scorpene-class submarine is set afloat at the naval dockyard in Mumbai, on Oct 29, 2015. VIJAYANAND GUPTA/HT FILE

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