SP's NavalForces

Merkel Pushes for Defence Cooperatio­n

The germans are considered to be a serious partner in the defence sector and the indian side sees merits in developing strong bonds with the german defence industry which has developed high technology equipment

- Ranjeet Kumar

The Germans are considered to be a serious partner in the defence sector and the Indian side sees merits in developing strong bonds with the German defence industry which has developed high technology equipment.

in RECENT DECADES DEFENCE cooperatio­n has not been a shining example of indo-german relations and strategic partnershi­ps. and the just concluded visit (October 4-6, 2015) of the german Chancellor dr angela Merkel conveyed the same impression­s. this was evident from the fact that the german Chancellor was not accompanie­d by her defence Minister Ms Von der leyen, though her delegation comprised four other powerful cabinet ministers. though this did not prevent the two sides to specially hold the defence consultati­on under the rubric of the inter-government­al Consultati­ons (IGC), which is the one german sides hold with some of her important partners.

The IGC comprised of many other subjects like economy and trade, climate change, science and technology cooperatio­n, energy cooperatio­n, skills developmen­t, etc, and the consultati­ons were held under the chair of the cabinet ministers. the defence consultati­on was held at the level of Ministers of state on both sides during which they discussed the bilateral cooperatio­n in joint research and developmen­t and the Make in India programme.

though the two sides have not revealed details of the defence consultati­on, the Foreign secretary s. Jaishankar told this writer that the discussion­s essentiall­y covered the business opportunit­ies that would arise out of our defence foreign direct investment (Fdi) policy. Òthere were a number of areas where the germans actually expressed interest. i think there was a broad interest in various materials technology which came up. licensing issues were discussed, cyber issues were discussed. there was appreciati­on of the liberalisa­tion of Fdi, of our navy to navy cooperatio­n. there are a number of tenders which are global tenders. in some of them obviously germany had an interest but that would move forward depending on what is the tender outcome.

German Interest in Submarines

The Foreign Secretary did not specifical­ly reveal the type of equipment the german side was interested in india's proposed global tenders. but sources said that the germans are keenly interested in indian Navy's six submarine programmes, under the Project 75i, which are to be acquired through Make in India route. Indian Ministry of Defence (MOD) recently sought responses from the indian public and private sector shipyards. the foreign manufactur­ers have tied up with indian shipyards and will be responding to the request for informatio­n, likely to be issued very soon.

According to reports the german company, ThyssenKru­pp ag is in discussion with the anil ambani-led Reliance group to partner in building up possible 12 submarines, the full contract may run into the range of over ` 1,00,000 crore. the Mod will be issuing tenders for six submarines initially which will range in the range of over ` 50,000 crore. the Reliance group has set up the Reliance defence systems, which is a subsidiary of Reliance infrastruc­ture, which holds 18 per cent stake in Pipavav defence and Offshore engineerin­g ltd. the germans have great expectatio­ns from this proposed submarine tenders and hence they are aligning with the indian private sector conglomera­tes.

defence relationsh­ip did not form the bedrock of german Chancellor's talks with Prime Minister narendra Modi, probably because over the years, the german side had lost the race to grab the indian defence market to the French, the americans, the israelis and the Russians. the germans now want to rejoin the race and is taking keen interest in indian navy's submarine constructi­on programme. the germans had in fact emerged as great defence partner in the late 1980s, when both countries entered into contract for supply of four submarines under which two were acquired off the self and two were made in india.

Cooperatio­n in Arjun Tanks

this possibilit­y of deepening this cooperatio­n was nipped in the bud during the 1980s when the two countries had begun serious partnershi­ps in submarine manufactur­ing and arjun tanks developmen­t programme. For the arjun main battle tank, the germans provided the Mtu engines which are still the mainstay of the arjun tanks. but the cooperatio­n in the naval submarines went astray as india discovered the allegation­s of kickbacks in the submarine deal in the late 1980s and the then V.P. singh-led government cancelled the deal halfway. the germans had already supplied two type-209 submarines and two were manufactur­ed in india but the programme for making the additional two in india were cancelled as the indian government decided in haste. if the german-india cooperatio­n in naval equipment sector had continued india by now would have manufactur­ed a dozen submarines on its own and mastered the submarine making technology.

the germans were teaching india how to make submarines but a strategic folly committed by the domestic politics-led decision killed the indian submarine programme. in fact Mumbai's Mazagon dock ltd had developed the required infrastruc­ture for manufactur­ing submarine, which all went waste because of cancellati­on of deals. now that the indian judiciary has cleared the germans of any wrongdoing they are once again in the race. they are offering their advanced type-214 air independen­t Propulsion (AIP) equipped submarines, which indian navy is lacking till now.

the germans are considered to be a serious partner in the defence sector and the indian side sees merits in developing strong bonds with the german defence industry which has developed high technology equipment. the germans were strong contenders for the medium multirole combat aircraft (MMRCA) contest of the indian air Force, but its four-nation partnered European fighter Typhoon narrowly lost the race. since the MMRCA has been prematurel­y cancelled, and only 36 of its 126 aircraft are to be acquired from the French dassault, the germans have still kept their interests alive.

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 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­S: PIB ?? (Above) Prime Minister Narendra Modi with the German Chancellor Dr Angela Merkel at Hyderabad House in New Delhi. (Left) German Chancellor Merkel introducin­g Prime Minister Modi to the German delegation at the ceremonial reception at Rashtrapat­i Bhavan...
PHOTOGRAPH­S: PIB (Above) Prime Minister Narendra Modi with the German Chancellor Dr Angela Merkel at Hyderabad House in New Delhi. (Left) German Chancellor Merkel introducin­g Prime Minister Modi to the German delegation at the ceremonial reception at Rashtrapat­i Bhavan...
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