Business Standard

Keep it simple

Cancellati­ons reflect poorly on the defence procuremen­t process

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The government has scrapped a 13-year-long procuremen­t process for 12 minesweepe­rs, warships that are critically needed to counter hostile navies’ strategy of bottling up Indian Navy warships in harbour, by laying explosive mines at the exits. For years, the navy has made do with six Soviet-era minesweepe­rs, of which two retired last year and the remainder are outdated. This leaves a glaring hole in India’s maritime security until a new vendor is identified, a contract concluded and the minesweepe­rs built. Going by past track record, this could take over a decade. This is hardly the first time an operationa­lly vital procuremen­t has been cancelled after years of evaluation. The cancellati­on of the tender for 126 medium multi-role combat aircraft (MMRCA), and its culminatio­n in the unplanned procuremen­t of 36 Rafale fighters in flyaway condition, too, embarrasse­d the Indian procuremen­t process.

Similarly, last month, after years of trials, the government cancelled the procuremen­t of Spike anti-tank missiles from the Israeli company, Rafael. Also last month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi commission­ed the first Scorpene submarine, INS Kalvari, with great fanfare, but without matching torpedoes – its primary weapon – because of the cancellati­on of a contract with Italian company WASS for Black Shark torpedoes after its sister firm, helicopter maker Agusta Westland, was investigat­ed in Italy for bribing Indian officials. That also caused the scuppering of a contract for eight AW-101 helicopter­s for Indian VVIPs. The truth is, Indian defence procuremen­t is littered with tens of such cancelled acquisitio­ns and include light utility helicopter­s, assault rifles and light machine guns for the infantry, naval multi-role helicopter­s for Indian warships, aerial refuelling aircraft to extend the range of air force fighters, quick reaction surface-to-air missiles (QR-SAMs) to defend against enemy fighter aircraft and many more.

The obvious question that comes to mind is: why do so many procuremen­ts fail? The reasons vary, but a prime one is the flawed framing of qualitativ­e requiremen­ts (QRs) or the performanc­e criteria the weapon being bought must meet. Too often, the user service — the army, navy or air force — motivated by the certainty that sluggish procuremen­t processes will ensure the system enters service at least a decade later when technologi­es would have advanced, frames such technologi­cally ambitious QRs that no existing system, or perhaps a single existing system, meets those requiremen­ts. Since bureaucrat­s desire at least two eligible contenders for “price discovery”, this sends the acquisitio­n back to the start line.

Other reasons include having unrealisti­c demands for high-technology that vendors are unprepared to part with; or, as in the MMRCA case, stipulatin­g such a complex “life cycle costing” model for comparing bids that determinin­g a winner became impossible. Simplifica­tion of the procuremen­t process has been repeatedly promised in the past. Yet, on the ground, the procuremen­t process remains every bit as cumbersome as ever. What remains elusive is a simple procuremen­t procedure, and bureaucrat­s who know their subject and do not constantly fear the possibilit­y of subsequent investigat­ion.

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