SP's NavalForces

Maritime Surveillan­ce

- Lt General P.C. Katoch (Retd)

With the centre of gravity of conflict veering towards the Indian Ocean, the requiremen­t of maritime surveillan­ce of the Indian Navy (IN) is in more limelight.

WITH THE CENTRE OF gravity of conflict veering towards the Indian Ocean, the requiremen­t of maritime surveillan­ce of the Indian Navy (IN) is in more limelight. china’s moves to establish bases in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), its nexus with Pakistan including PLa troops and marines based in Pakistan indicates china’s aggressive intentions. chinese vessels have been snooping in India’s eeZ especially in vicinity of the andaman and Nicobar Group of islands (aNI), and movement of chinese ships and submarines in the Indian Ocean is on the increase. The US administra­tion under President donald Trump had approved the sale of armed drones to India in June 2019 and offered these to be equipped with required missiles and other systems. Our media reported in November that our Ministry of defence (Mod) was moving towards deals for procuring US defence equipment worth some $7.5 billion including Sea Guardian armed drones and naval spy planes.

According to a government official a Letter of Request (similar to a Request for Proposal - RFP) is expected to be issued to the US for a government-to-government deal through the FMS route by February-March 2020. The other major deal in the pipeline is the project for the acquisitio­n of the 10 x P-8I anti-submarine warfare and long-range surveillan­ce aircraft which would be adding to the existing fleet of 12 such planes in the IN. The P-8I planes are expected to cost around $3.1 billion and would also be acquired under the FMS route post approval by the cabinet committee on Security (ccS) headed by the Prime Minister. Separately, the IN is also being equipped with 24 x MH60R Seahawk anti-Submarine helicopter­s from the US at a cost about $2.616 billion which includes accessorie­s, spare parts, technical support and maintenanc­e facilities. The Seahawks are to be equipped with cutting edge sonar and radar to detect submarines travelling on the surface or just below the surface’ modern nuclear submarines travel just below the ocean surface to get rid of exhaust fumes.

Presently, the IN is looking at procuring 30 x Sea Guardian unmanned aerial systems (UAS), and another Boeing 10 x P-8I Poseidon multi-mission maritime aircraft (MMa) for monitoring the Indian Ocean. The P-8I aircraft already occupy a pride of place in the IN and are deployed for a variety of operations, from submarine tracking to search and rescue (SaR) and even reconnaiss­ance over land. The first batch of 8 x P-8I aircraft were ordered under a $2.1 billion deal in 2009 and a follow on order for four was placed in 2016. P-8I aircraft that specialise­s in tracking and hunting down enemy submarines with lightweigh­t torpedoes and depth charges are also operated by the US and australian navies, which operate in coordinati­on with India to keep track of ship movements. With the contract of 10 x P-8I aircraft to be procured now, the Navy’s fleet of P-8I aircraft will go up to 22. This will ensure these aircraft arrive early with continuous supply over the next four years, facilitati­ng and compensati­on for older maritime reconnaiss­ance assets of Russian origin retiring. The deal of 10 x P-8I aircraft reportedly includes a mandatory clause for at least 30 per cent offsets to domestic companies. The fleet of 22 x P-8I aircraft will help the IN maintain strong vigil over a region that has seen increasing deployment­s by the chinese Navy. an idea has now been thrown up that since the US air Force (USaF) has proposed to discard two-thirds of its fleet of about 35 x RQ-4 Global Hawk drones, India should dump the move to procure the 30 x Sea Guardian UAS and 10 x Boeing P-8I aircraft and instead go for the discarded Global hawk drones, the claim being that up to 24 x Global Hawk drones can be purchased within the same price as being spent on 30 x Sea Guardian and 10 x P-8I. how this claim is made remains a mystery unless US has intimated the sale price of the Global hawks under discard.

There is no doubt USaF has proposed retiring some 21 of its 35 x RQ-4 Global hawk high-altitude drones, currently collecting intelligen­ce across the Middle east and elsewhere, as part of a series of steep cuts to legacy programmes. But the real reason why USAF wants to dump the RQ-4 Global hawk is because Iran shot down one such drone over the Strait of hormuz on June 20, 2019. according to Loren Thompson of the Lexington Institute, “It (RQ-4 Global Hawk) was well suited to go against terrorists, but against a threat like china it just won’t survive. Flying a Global hawk over chinese airspace would be suicidal. when a secondrate power like Iran can shoot your weapon with its own indigenous missile, that’s not a good sign for the future.” Therefore, it would be downright stupid for India to buy discarded RQ-4 Global Hawks instead of new Sea Guardian drones and P-8I aircraft, especially when the RQ-4 Global Hawk with a wingspan of 131 feet is easily spotted by radar and has no defensive systems.

Interestin­gly, commercial earth imaging company Satellogic announced on december 19, 2019, that it has raised $50 million to help scale up its satellite constellat­ion; chinese company Tencent and Brazilian fund Pitanga contribute­d about 40 per cent of the funding, rest coming from new investors. Satellogic has eight satellites in orbit and plans to launch 16 satellites in 2020, with the first two scheduled to launch from china in mid-January. India just launched its second ‘eye in the sky’ — sharp-eyed surveillan­ce satellite RISaT-2BR1 with synthetic aperture radar - a radar imaging satellite. Given the prowess of ISRO, India must plan its own satellite constellat­ion (using low-costing ISRO satellites) focused on the India Ocean, in addition to Navy’s maritime surveillan­ce platforms under procuremen­t.

 ??  ?? Sikorsky MH-60R - likely to be signed for Indian Navy under FMS
Sikorsky MH-60R - likely to be signed for Indian Navy under FMS

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