The Asian Age

Niti seeks `1.7L crore for military buys by ’20

- SANJIB KR BARUAH NEW DELHI, APRIL 28

Government think-tank Niti Aayog has sought `1,72,000 crore by 2019-20 for India’s military to buy weapons and related hardware and equipment.

This is keeping in mind changing global and regional security scenarios as well as the dynamic nature of demands of India’s Army, Navy, Air Force and other constituen­ts of the military machine.

A recent Niti Aayog document titled “The Three Year Action Agenda: An Overview” says: “The allocation towards capital expenditur­e in defence will increase from around `95,000 crore in 2015-16 to about `1,72,000 crore by 2019-20, thereby increasing its share of total expenditur­e from 5.3% to 6.2%. This is for greater purchases of equipment for the armed forces, keeping in mind the security considerat­ions for the country.”

Capital expenditur­es are funds set aside for buying weapons, aircraft, warships and other military equipment. India, with the world’s third largest armed forces, is already in the middle of a major defence modernisat­ion programme.

The document charts an ambitious, transforma­tional yet achievable action agenda for the government during 2017-18 to 2019-20.

Continued from Page 1 The “agenda” is part of a 15year “vision” and seven-year “strategy”.

With the changeover from the erstwhile Planning Commission to the Niti Aayog, the realm of deliberati­ons has extended beyond the traditiona­l areas to cover aspects of defence and internal security.

It is also felt that increasing allocation­s by the government on capital expenditur­es will lead to a “trickle- down” effect and mean more work for the small and medium enterprise­s which will further help in defence and fleet modernisat­ion, besides boosting the “Make in India” programme.

Interestin­gly, in June, the Niti Aayog in a meeting chaired by its vice-chairman Dr Arvind Panagariya and attended by India’s top economists, underlinin­g the need to rapidly modernise India’s military, had considered whether the government is spending on weapons “without strategic purposes” keeping in view the “changed threat perception­s” nowadays. It was one of the first moves to integrate India’s defence and internal security plans with the overall 15-year vision document being prepared to replace the five-year plans.

At the moment, the acquisitio­n of weapon systems and equipment for the armed forces flow from the ongoing “Long Term Integrated Perspectiv­e Plan” (LTIPP), which spells out the capability desired. The Niti Aayog is grappling with the issue of trying to weave in the LTIPP into the vision document.

Sensing that the defence ministry is not too keen on the LTIPP, a parliament­ary panel recently had sought a cost-benefit analysis of the LTIPP. The report of the standing committee on defence said: “The (defence) ministry feels that there is no necessity for LTIPP. Therefore the committee desire that a cost benefit analysis of LTIPP should be carried out and they be informed of the findings”.

The LTIPP was evolved by the headquarte­rs integrated defence staff in consultati­on with the service headquarte­rs as a 15-year plan to meet the needs of the country’s armed forces.

According to the latest report by the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) released on Monday, India is the world’s fifth largest spender on military. India’s military expenditur­e grew by 8.5 per cent in 2016 to $55.9 billion, making it the fifth largest spender. But SIPRI’s figures includes expenditur­e on the paramilita­ry forces of the Border Security Force, the Central Reserve Police Force, the Assam Rifles, the IndoTibeta­n Border Police and the Sashastra Seema Bal but do not include spending on military nuclear activities.

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