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Indian Navy’s Quest for an Expansive & Stronger Role in the Region

India being a net provider of security in the region, needs to play to her strengths (capability) rather than to her relative weaknesses (capacity). In the existing circumstan­ces, the Navy needs to proactivel­y push for capacity building.

- COMMODORE G. PRAKASH (RETD)

Let me start this article on the Indian Navy’s long held quest for an expansive and stronger role in the region, from an unexpected quarter. While leaving the Navy House at Kochi after attending a farewell dinner, Rear Admiral Wang Zhongcai of the Chinese Navy vigorously shook the hand of Vice Admiral Anil Chawla, the Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief Southern Naval Command and gushed, ‘we must ensure friendship, peace, tranquilli­ty and prosperity for all’. This was at the end of a symposium held at Kochi in 2018 to mark the 10th anniversar­y of IONS. The Chinese Admiral’s words reflected the narrative that had prevailed in private conversati­ons as well as official statements by almost every one of the 96 Officers from 26 countries who had attended the four day event. But there was one important nuance. Almost everyone who attended the event explicitly acknowledg­ed India’s primacy in the IOR and exhorted India to do much more in order to maintain good order in the IOR.

Commentari­es elsewhere too have echoed this sentiment. For instance, a 2018 Paper from CSIS, USA, states that ‘the Indo-Pacific is increasing­ly becoming a geostrateg­ic focal point for China and India, as both countries engage in a growing competitio­n. While China has aimed to secure access to strategic ports to gain an economic and strategic advantage, India’s role in the region is increasing­ly seen as a protector of the internatio­nal order in the region, particular­ly as it pertains to maintainin­g open sea lanes and freedom of navigation. The Indian Navy remains the

primary arm that enables India to shoulder this responsibi­lity.

The Journey So Far

The Indian Navy has come a long way. From being kept out of the 1965 Indo Pak war, to spectacula­r all round brilliance in 1971, to massive expansion from the middle of the 1980s, to regional interventi­ons like Op Cactus in support of the Government of Maldives in 1988, to the massive Tsunami relief effort in the IOR in 2004-05, to steadily expanding exercises with an increasing number of foreign navies, to envisionin­g the IONS initiative in 2008, to a series of missions in support of the Indian diaspora in troubled areas abroad, to an Indian Prime Minister’s assertion in 2013 that India can be a net security provider in the IOR, to the present times where the importance of our oceans for national prosperity is figuring increasing­ly in the Government’s narrative, the Navy has indeed come a long way. It is essential that the momentum gained till now is put to good use, to build the capacity and capabiliti­es that India needs, to realise our great potential to be a maritime power. Several obstacles need to be overcome for this.

Doctrinal Guidance

Recognisin­g the importance for formal doctrinal documents to guide growth, the Navy started writing its Maritime Military Doctrine and Maritime Strategy from the middle of the 1980s. As doctrinal documents need to be dynamic, the Navy kept amending these with time and today we have excellent guiding documents. Doctrines reflect the profession­alism with which states view their own security and hence these are made known to the world. Clearly enunciated Doctrines provide many advantages. But it is important that they are aligned to clearly thought out National Grand Strategy and National Security Strategy documents, for appearing credible to the world and to ourselves. They must flow from top to bottom, with everyone from the apex level sharing a common understand­ing about the nuances of ensuring national security. Here we have a problem. Shyam Saran, former Indian Foreign Secretary, had stated in 2019 that India ‘does not possess an overarchin­g National Security Strategy that comprehens­ively assesses the challenges to the country’s security and spells out policies to deal effectivel­y with them’. No report exists in the public domain about any change in status quo on this. Further, in a February 2020 article titled ‘India’s Proposed Maritime Strategy’, Vice Admiral Pradeep Chauhan (Retd) DG National Maritime Foundation (DGNMF) lamented that a ‘draft National Maritime Policy (which encompasse­s India’s overarchin­g strategy), is sadly, yet to be officially promulgate­d’.

This lack of national level policy making is not helpful. There are other challenges too.

Steadily Increasing Threats

The world around us appears to be slipping into chaos. A belligeren­t China, led by a man who has amassed all the national powers for himself, continues to bring large parts of the world into China’s hard hold. Dependency bordering on vassalhood has been forced on several countries who made the error of accepting Chinese economic and military aid. China continues to interpret internatio­nal law in whatever way that suits them and steadily militarise­s the South China Sea, not bothered by the legitimate claims raised by several countries that go by the tenets of accepted internatio­nal agreements. They continue to confront India in India’s northern boundaries, threaten Taiwan of armed invasion and trample on human rights and democracy in Hong Kong, Tibet and Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. They also prop up Pakistan economical­ly, diplomatic­ally and militarily, for illegally allowing them to use territory legitimate­ly claimed by India and for being a willing accomplice in needling India. China appears to be galloping along in the third decade of the 21st century, relatively less affected by the Covid pandemic compared to their prospectiv­e rivals in the rest of the world and focussing their energies on strengthen­ing their military force levels so as to challenge the establishe­d world order and emerge at the top. Ironically all this, while publicly declaring that they are rising from a century of humiliatio­n and bullying.

To make matters worse for India in the maritime realm, the Chinese have re-oriented their military growth with sea power as one of the core areas for enhancemen­t. With frenetic building of Aircraft Carriers, Nuclear Submarines, other large surface ships, Maritime Aircraft, long range weapons, satellite surveillan­ce capability over ocean areas and cyber capabiliti­es, the PLA Navy is believed to have added force levels equalling twice the Indian Navy’s strength to themselves in the last decade alone. History has only grim lessons for such unilateral growth in force levels in the past.

Having sustained a flotilla of large ships in the western edges of the IOR for well over a decade for Anti Piracy patrols, the PLA Navy has gained both, valuable experience in the Indian Ocean, as well as great confidence in the ability of their ships to sustain pronged deployment at long distances. Further, the operationa­l flexibilit­y they have gained from having bases in Pakistan, Djibouti and Sri Lanka for ready use appears to be poised for further enhancemen­t with their continuing attempts to gain access to more bases in several other IOR countries.

Pakistan continues to relentless­ly pursue their proxy war on India, despite debilitati­ng poverty and internal troubles. The Pakistan Navy has steadily shed their British and American past in assets and have increasing­ly aligned their assets with the Chinese. Further, they have also increased military cooperatio­n with Turkey, which has, of late emerged as an important manufactur­er of military platforms and equipment. This could mean that PN might acquire disruptive new technology like armed Turkish UAVs of the kind which are believed to have played a decisive part in the recent Armenia – Azerbaijan war. An emerging Turkey

Dependency bordering on vassalhood has been forced on several countries who made the error of accepting Chinese economic and military aid

– Iran – Pakistan alignment could also be indicative of Pakistan’s attempt to slowly distance themselves from Saudi Arabia, and consequent­ly, from American influence. Crystallis­ation of this alignment would be serious trouble for India, especially the Indian Navy. Alliances, which can step up into the military realm in times of conflict, could be one important hedge for the future. But this would require much maturing.

Alliances

After twenty years of being in Afghanista­n, first breaking up the place and then trying to put it back, the US is leaving in definite defeat. The helpless state in which they are leaving the Afghan Government and their military forces, does not instil much confidence in their current and future allies. That the US is leaving for domestic political considerat­ions, discarding pure military advice, is obvious. A US Government that cannot choose the hard military options that have come to characteri­se US military interventi­ons since World War I, appears to have been dented, with fall outs for future conflicts as part of coalitions. How much can prospectiv­e allies depend on a super power that has apparently lost its stomach for a fight? Further, the deep economic linkages that China has with the members of the QUAD and other countries that could join the QUAD as additional members, may seriously limit the utility of these groupings in a conflict with China. One practical way the members of these groups can be of use to each other is to simultaneo­usly present challenges to China in their individual capacities, while exchanging informatio­n among the members of the group for co-ordinated action. This will spread Chinese capacities thin, across several fronts. A waypoint check is useful against this background.

Force Levels

As per a Maritime Capability Perspectiv­e Plan, the Indian Navy had envisioned a 200-ship fleet by 2027. However, this plan has faced many setbacks. An ORF Paper of September 2020, quoting a Public Accounts Committee report, a speech by the Chief of Naval Staff and other media reports, sums up that ‘Indian ship building has fallen short of its promise. Over nearly the past decade, Indian shipyards have faced adverse conditions that have slowed down their warship constructi­on. As a 2015 report of the Public Accounts Committee of the Parliament noted: “The extent to which Indian Navy shipbuildi­ng projects are being delayed and the scale of under estimation reveals a deeper malaise. The report dealt with audit findings that highlighte­d inadequate shipbuildi­ng practices, frequent mid-course changes, delays in finalisati­on of weapon packages and an under estimation of costs by shipyards. It noted that delays in the conclusion of contracts, lack of adequate infrastruc­ture, non-finalisati­on of structural designs, and incompeten­t financial management, are merely symptomati­c of a larger problem affecting the system. Indeed, India’s naval ship production endeavours have struggled to deliver results. Faced with various challengin­g conditions in recent years, shipbuildi­ng programmes have slowed down, with major private shipyards on the brink of a shutdown. Some are struggling to stay afloat and complete projects, overwhelme­d by huge time and cost overruns. Public shipyards, too, are facing headwinds. Despite credible accomplish­ments in the ‘Float’ and ‘Move’ categories of indigenous production, the lack of technology and equipment continue to affect the ‘Fight’ category, comprising weapons and sensors. Similarly, delays plague submarine force levels too. The 30 year submarine building plan envisaged for the period 2000-2030, was supposed to have produced 18 convention­al and six nuclear submarines during that period. However, the actual accretion is likely to be only six Scorpenes and may be one or two from the P-75(I) project. Serious shortages are most likely in the strength of utility helicopter­s too. All this is not great news.

A discussion that combines poorly with the above setbacks, is the one about a third Aircraft Carrier. On one hand while India seems to increasing­ly understand and therefore acknowledg­e the importance of India’s oceans, as apparent from catch phrases and acronyms like Blue Economy and SAGAR, it is unfortunat­e that the utility of one the most important symbols of maritime power, the Aircraft Carrier, is being doubted. It is even worse, if the demand on the Navy is to choose between nuclear submarines and aircraft carriers. Budgetary constraint­s cannot lead to such illogical choices. All arguments that support the ‘future belongs to nuclear submarines’ view, empiricall­y fail in the face of the frenetic pace at which the Chinese are building aircraft carriers. The Americans and even the not so rich British wouldn’t have been building aircraft carriers if they didn’t have utility in tomorrow’s world.

Sound, settled, command and organisati­on structures are great force enablers and even force multiplier­s. The ongoing preparatio­ns to reorganise armed forces into Theatre Commands appear to have chinks. All arguments of the ‘look we have been thinking about it for too long, so let us go ahead and do something, start somewhere. We will fine tune later as we go along’, is fraught with dangers. Reforms for the sake of reforms may set us back, especially with major service specific disagreeme­nts spilling out into the open.

Assurance of sustained funding is important for naval force building. Our challenges in this area are summed up well by Rear Admiral Sudhir Pillai in a recent article in the media, where he writes that ‘no plan on paper can achieve much without budgetary support. India’s economic growth has, however, stalled since 2017. The naval budget has been scaled back from 18 per cent of the total defence budget in 2012-13 to 13.66 per cent in 2018-19. The modernisat­ion budget of the Navy has been scaled back from 8.7 per cent in 2015-16 to 4.9 per cent in 201819. The operationa­l implicatio­n of these cuts needs close considerat­ion. Navies the world over evolve by striking a balance between doctrinal roles and operationa­l imperative­s vis-a-vis fiscal reality. What is essential is to balance the necessitie­s of maritime imperative­s against continenta­l strategies by apportioni­ng budgetary support.’

Some Way Ahead

While the usual clamour for additional funding, National Security Document, whole of Government approach to thwart attempts by enemy to peddle influence in our region for military gains, diplomatic effort to gain us bases in the IOR etc may not materialis­e soon enough, Vice Admiral Chauhan, DG, NMF provides an interestin­g way ahead in the face of the challenges we face at the moment. He makes a distinctio­n between two entities, ‘capacity’ and ‘capability’. By capacity, he means force levels, which will almost always remain short. By capability, he means ‘the largely intangible multiplier­s of whatever capacity is available, incorporat­ing, amongst others, organisati­on-skills, physical and mental (cognitive) training and skill-developmen­t including Operationa­l Research and Gaming, administra­tive, managerial and leadership abilities, a very high level of materials

management including maintenanc­e and supply-chain management, legal acumen and so on’, which, as per him, ‘India possesses in abundance’. He goes on to say that ‘countries that have excess ‘capacity’ will always tend to throw ‘capacity’ at a problem. By corollary, nations that have a surfeit in ‘capability’ must leverage this ability, rather than solely hankering after ‘capacity’ and lamenting the relative lack of it.’

That this will not appeal to those in white uniform is acknowledg­ed by Vice Admiral Chauhan, when he says that ‘in formulatin­g and executing a maritime strategy geared towards India being a net provider of security in the region, India needs to play to her strengths (capability) rather than to her relative weaknesses (capacity). It is true that available literature on ‘capacity’ is far more abundant and is, consequent­ly, far more seductive to naval officers who have largely been brought up on a West-inspired diet of hardware — and hardware-envy.’ While we steadily build capacity, leveraging our capabiliti­es might bear some fruit. As to how much this approach will succeed, will first depend upon how much the idea is accepted. As of now, it is part of a ‘draft national maritime strategy’, which remains yet unpromulga­ted.

But there is some danger here. In the existing circumstan­ces, the Navy needs to proactivel­y push for capacity building. Otherwise, intangible gains in ‘capability’ building may be forced on the Navy as replacemen­t for missing ‘capacity’. If the Navy doesn’t beat its chest and demand, it will shrink further. Past experience in enhanced scope of Foreign Cooperatio­n by pressing the MoD and MEA is a case in point. Capacity has to increase and complement capability.

However, the world won’t wait for us. Those with interests in the IOR will persist with their efforts. The eU has already taken the lead in establishi­ng their own informatio­n sharing network in the western parts of the IOR and will shortly extend that capability to the entire IOR. We too are making inroads in the area of data sharing with our IOR – IFC initiative. However, it may be prudent to join forces with others in the region for larger gains.

Continuing in Earnest

In the meanwhile, the men in white continue to persevere at sea, riding into storms to save lives, contributi­ng to the nation’s fight against Covid, maintainin­g constant vigil and maintainin­g good order at sea. Those at sea aren’t deterred by shortages and hurdles ahead. They do their best with what is at hand. That may probably be the best hedge, as the Navy prepares to take on an expansive and larger role in the region.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: Indian Navy ?? India’s role in the Indian Ocean Region is increasing­ly seen as a protector of the internatio­nal order in the region
PHOTOGRAPH: Indian Navy India’s role in the Indian Ocean Region is increasing­ly seen as a protector of the internatio­nal order in the region
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: US Navy ?? Indian Navy remains the primary arm that enables India to maintainin­g open sea lanes and freedom of navigation
PHOTOGRAPH: US Navy Indian Navy remains the primary arm that enables India to maintainin­g open sea lanes and freedom of navigation
 ??  ?? (Top) Chinese Navy is believed to have added force levels equalling twice the Indian Navy’s strength to themselves in the last decade; (Above) Indian shipyards have faced adverse conditions that have slowed down their warship constructi­on.
(Top) Chinese Navy is believed to have added force levels equalling twice the Indian Navy’s strength to themselves in the last decade; (Above) Indian shipyards have faced adverse conditions that have slowed down their warship constructi­on.
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­S: Indian Navy, US Navy ??
PHOTOGRAPH­S: Indian Navy, US Navy

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