Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

India may...

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The Indian Air Force (IAF) is also keen to buy Predator Avenger UAVS from the US.

The downsizing of the order will mean that the navy will have to prioritise the areas it wants to keep under surveillan­ce using the Seaguardia­n UAVS, said a senior navy officer on condition of anonymity.

“We had arrived at a figure of 22 on the basis of our requiremen­ts. But we have to manage with the resources we have. The navy has several aerial surveillan­ce platforms such P-8I aircraft, IL-38S, Dornier planes and other UAVS,” he said.

A government-to-government deal does away with the need to float a tender. Such transactio­ns may be complicate­d in their conception and execution but are more transparen­t to financial scrutiny.

“If financial constraint­s are there, then there’s no choice but to order fewer UAVS,” said military affairs expert Rear Admiral (retd) Sudarshan Shrikhande. The MQ-9B Seaguardia­n systems will provide unmatched intelligen­ce and surveillan­ce capabiliti­es to the navy, he said.

The navy currently operates a mix of Israeli-built Heron and Searcher UAVS for intelligen­cegatherin­g and surveillan­ce. It has a vast area of responsibi­lity in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) spanning millions of square kilometres, with warships being deployed to as far as the Persian Gulf to the Strait of Malacca and northern Bay of Bengal to the southeast coast of Africa.

With their range and endurance, Seaguardia­n UAVS will provide India advanced capabiliti­es for ocean surveillan­ce, especially at a time when Chinese naval presence in the region has gone up. India’s exclusive economic zone alone measures 2.4 millionsqu­arekilomet­res,which is also the navy’s responsibi­lity.

Navy chief Admiral Sunil Lanba had highlighte­d the significan­ce of the Indian Ocean earlier this month, calling it the navy’s only front. “As we surge ahead in the 21st century, the attention of the entire world is focused on the Indian Ocean Region, where our navy is increasing­ly seen as a ‘net security provider’…our security strategy is aimed at providing a maritime environmen­t that is free from all forms of traditiona­l and non-traditiona­l threats to our national developmen­t,” Lanba had said.

The P-8I planes, the mainstay of the navy’s long-range maritime surveillan­ce fleet, have also been imported from the US. India currently operates eight Boeing P-8I planes and four more will join the fleet by 2021.

General Atomics has also designed the electromag­netic aircraft launch and recovery system (EMALS), which is likely to be fitted on India’s second Indigenous Aircraft Carrier (IAC-II).

The navy is getting more American equipment. India issued an LOR to the US government in November for 24 MH-60R Seahawk multirole helicopter­s under the FMS programme.

Since 2008, India has bought or ordered military equipment worth $15 billion from the US. This includes C-130J special operations planes, C-17 transport aircraft and P-8I submarine hunter planes.

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