Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

India, Russia to hammer out navy frigate deal today

Stealth frigates to be built with tech transfer from Russia

- Rahul Singh rahul.singh@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEW DELHI: India and Russia will on Tuesday hammer out a $500 million contract to build two stealth frigates in Goa that are expected to be delivered by 2027, two officials familiar with the developmen­t said.

NEW DELHI: India and Russia will on Tuesday hammer out a $500 million contract to build two stealth frigates in Goa that are expected to be delivered by 2027, two officials familiar with the developmen­t said on condition of anonymity.

Russia’s state-run arms exporter Rosoborone­xport and India’s Goa Shipyard Limited (GSL) will sign the contract in New Delhi to build the Grigorovic­h-class ‘Project 1135.6’ frigates with technology transfer from Russia, which is India’s top arms supplier.

The deal comes just weeks after the two countries inked a nearly $1 billion deal to import two other such warships from Russia. Those ships are being built at the Yantar Shipyard in Kaliningra­d and are expected to be delivered to the Indian Navy by 2022-23. A government official said the warships being built in India will eventually cost a lot more than $500 million, which is only the upfront value of the deal. “The $500 million is for the foreign content in the vessels including material, design and specialist assistance. The frigates will cost more factoring in the indigenous content. That cost is being worked out,” he said.

GSL is expected to deliver the first frigate in 2026 and the second a year later, a second official added.

The frigate deal comes a month-and-a-half after India signed a ₹39,000-crore deal with Russia for the supply of Russian S-400 Triumf air defence missile systems to India, brushing aside Washington’s concerns about the purchase. Both the S-400 and the frigate deal are likely to be affected by the US sanctions legislatio­n if India is unable to secure a waiver.

India is in talks with the US to secure a waiver from the Countering America’s Adversarie­s through Sanctions Act (Caatsa), arguing that its military is heavily dependent on Russian equipment. India is simultaneo­usly exploring ways to bypass the US sanctions including an alternativ­e payment route for Russian equipment.

The Caatsa legislatio­n passed earlier this year does provide some flexibilit­y for countries such as India that are dependent on Russian equipment, but Washington wants India to diversify its suppliers of military equipment and reduce dependence on Russian military hardware

India inked an Inter-Government­al Agreement (IGA) with Russia for the four frigates in 2016. The Indian Navy currently operates six such stealth frigates — three Talwar class and three Teg class — bought from Russia and inducted between 2003 and 2013.

“The best thing is the navy will now have 10 warships in the same class. That’s rare...,” said Admiral Arun Prakash, a former navy chief.

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