Posted on 02/03/2010 8:40:51 PM PST by sukhoi-30mki
Piercing the army's armour of deception
Ajai Shukla / New Delhi February 4, 2010, 0:31 IST
Vital facts on the Russian T-90 tank deal were suppressed and its performance on the field has been a disaster.
On August 24 last year, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) dressed up failure as achievement when almost nine years after India bought the T-90 tank from Russia the first 10 built-in-India T-90s were ceremonially rolled out of the Heavy Vehicles Factory (HVF) near Chennai.
No reasons were given for that delay. Nor did the Ministry of Defence (MoD) reveal the T-90s ballooning cost, now a whopping Rs 17.5 crore. On November 30, 2006, the MoD told the Lok Sabha that the T-90 tank cost Rs 12 crore apiece. Parliament does not yet know about the 50 per cent rise in cost.
The story of the T-90 has been coloured by deception and obfuscation from even before the tank was procured. Business Standard has pieced together, from internal documents and multiple interviews with MoD sources, an account of how the Indian Army has saddled itself with an underperforming, yet overpriced, version of the Russian T-90.
The deception stemmed from the armys determination to push through the T-90 contract despite vocal opposition from sections of Parliament. Former Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda argued allegedly because a close associate had a commercial interest in continuing with T-72 production that fitting the T-72 with modern fire control systems and night vision devices would be cheaper than buying the T-90. Deve Gowda correctly pointed out that even Russias army had spurned the T-90.
To bypass his opposition, the MoD and the army reached an understanding with Rosvoorouzhenie, Russias arms export agency. The T-90 would be priced only marginally higher than the T-72 by removing key T-90 systems; India would procure those through supplementary contracts after the T-90 entered service. Excluded from Indias T-90s was the Shtora active protection system, which protects the T-90 from incoming enemy missiles. This was done knowing well that Pakistans anti-tank defences are based heavily on missiles.
Other important systems were also pared. The MoD opted to buy reduced numbers of the INVAR missile, which the T-90 fires. Maintenance vehicles, which are vital to keep the T-90s running, were not included in the contract. All this allowed the government to declare before Parliament that the Russian T-90s cost just Rs 11 crore, while the assembled-in-India T-90s were Rs 12 crore apiece.
The MoD did not mention that these prices would rise when the supplementary contracts were negotiated. Nor did it reveal that Indias pared-down T-90s barely matched the performance of the Pakistan Armys recently acquired T-80 UD tank, which India had cited as the threat that demanded the T-90.
Worse was to follow when the initial batch of 310 T-90s entered service (124 bought off-the-shelf and 186 as knocked-down kits). It quickly became evident and that too during Operation Parakram, with India poised for battle against Pakistan that the T-90s were not battleworthy. The T-90s thermal imaging (TI) sights, through which the tank aims its 125mm gun, proved unable to function in Indian summer temperatures. And, the INVAR missiles assembled in India simply didnt work. Since nobody knew why, they were sent back to Russia.
Even more alarmingly, the army discovered that the T-90 sighting systems could not fire Indian tank ammunition, which was falling short of the targets. So, even as a panicked MoD appealed to the DRDO and other research institutions to re-orient the T-90s fire control computer for firing Indian ammunition, Russian ammunition was bought.
With Russia playing hardball, none of the supplementary contracts have yet gone through. The TI sights remain a problem. The army has decided to fit each T-90 with an Environment Control System, to cool the delicate electronics with a stream of chilled air. None of the worlds current tanks, other than Frances LeClerc, has such a system. The American Abrams and the British Challenger tanks fought in the Iraq desert without air-conditioning. Indias Arjun tank, too, has hardened electronics that function perfectly even in the Rajasthan summer.
Nor has the MoD managed to procure the Shtora anti-missile system. The Directorate General of Mechanised Forces now plans to equip Indias eventual 1,657-tank T-90 fleet with the advanced ARENA active protection system, for which it has budgeted Rs 2,500 crore in the Army Acquisition Plan for 2009-11.
The greatest concern arose when Russia held back on its contractual obligation to transfer the technology needed to build 1,000 T-90s in India. But, instead of pressuring Russia, the MoD rewarded it in 2007 with a contract for 347 more T-90s. In an astonishing Catch-22, the MoD argued that the new purchase was needed because indigenous production had not begun.
Next month, when the T-90 is measured against the Arjun in comparative trials, the T-90s drawbacks will not be evident. But, as officers who have operated the T-90 admit, these could be crucial handicaps in battle.
It is for these reasons that I have consistently argued for supporting the Indian Arjun tank, says General Shankar Roy Chowdhury, former army chief and himself a tankman. Another country can hold India hostage in many ways. We need to place an order for several hundred Arjun tanks so that economies of scale can kick in and we can bring down the price even further.
If the Arjun performs strongly in next months comparative trials around Suratgarh and Pokhran, that order could be in the offing.
/mark
They make really cool roadside decor, after being targeted by A-10’s.
Perhaps someone can enlighten me as to why they did not buy the M1?
So can supposedly the best battle tank in the world (the Leopard from Germany) take out the T-90?
Incredibly low profile on the T-90 turret.
China is smiling.
I think this article further illustrates the concerns and arguments of those who have repeatedly questioned and argued against the Indian government’s continued reliance on Russian military hardware.
BFL.
Interesting anecdote about the Arjun and the M-1. The Arjun was originally meant to be a replacement for the British Vickers MBT and was supposed to weigh in about 40 tonnes with a 105 mm gun. The specs changed to what it is now after Pakistan was offered the M1!!! General Zia Ul Haq and the US ambassador were killed in a plane crash after they witnessed Abrams trials.
Ironically, nearly 4 years later: http://www.india-defence.com/reports/2081
Technically its not the Indian government which is at fault here-its the army. Vested interests and resistance to change (logistics, training etc) to be more precise.
Tanks are overrated.
Cheers!
“Tanks are overrated.”
Until you don’t have one....
“Hello and thank you for calling the T-90 support line. Please listen as our options have recently changed.
If you are having difficulty with the drive system (forward or reverse), please press 1.
If you are having difficulty with the main cannon or turret, please press 2.
If you are having difficulty with the navigation or other electronics, please press 3.
If you are having difficulty with the machine gun, please press 4.
If your armour has been breached or you are under heavy fire, please hang up and call 1-800-USA-HELP, then press the 9 key.”
(boop-beep-bop)
>>Hello, I am Sandeep. How can I be helping you this fine day?<<
My site scope isn’t tracking. It just looks blurry.
>>I am sorry your site scope isn’t tracking and just looks blurry. Pleasing you are to write down the following support case number: 87799188211199812234-ARD. Also, is there a phone number I can call you at if we do not complete this call?<<
1-814-252-1234
>>Thanking you. Now, please tell me the serial number on your scope. It is in a tag next to the vodka dispenser.<<
8992001
>>Thanking you. Now, we will have to reboot the tank. Please have everyone get out of the tank and type “RBT” on the tank console. When it asks for the authorization code, enter 1771-SANDEEP-1.<<
We can’t get out of the tank. We are next to the Pakistan border!
>>Thanking You. Now that you are out of the tank and the reboot has started, pleasing you are to wait 15 minutes, then type “765-STARTUP” on the console<<
We haven’t started it yet! We can’t get out unless we want our butts shot off!
>>Thanking You. Am I to understand your butt is keeping you from the exiting the tank?<<
Etc...
Excluded from Indias T-90s was the Shtora active protection system, which protects the T-90 from incoming enemy missiles. This was done knowing well that Pakistans anti-tank defences are based heavily on missiles.
-DOH!
Other important systems were also pared. The MoD opted to buy reduced numbers of the INVAR missile, which the T-90 fires. Maintenance vehicles, which are vital to keep the T-90s running, were not included in the contract.
-A tank aint much good if aint running.
All this allowed the government to declare before Parliament that the Russian T-90s cost just Rs 11 crore, while the assembled-in-India T-90s were Rs 12 crore apiece.
-If my math is correct, that is right around $ 2.5 million U.S. per tank.
The MoD did not mention that these prices would rise when the supplementary contracts were negotiated. Nor did it reveal that Indias pared-down T-90s barely matched the performance of the Pakistan Armys recently acquired T-80 UD tank, which India had cited as the threat that demanded the T-90.
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/ukraine/t-80ud.htm
And, the INVAR missiles assembled in India simply didnt work. Since nobody knew why, they were sent back to Russia.
-DOH! (part 2)
With Russia playing hardball, none of the supplementary contracts have yet gone through. The TI sights remain a problem. The army has decided to fit each T-90 with an Environment Control System, to cool the delicate electronics with a stream of chilled air. None of the worlds current tanks, other than Frances LeClerc, has such a system.
- I might be wrong, but I thought the Israelis fit a lot of their tanks with air conditioning systems. That may have been a crew issue, though, rather than a system dedicated to cooling the electronics.
The American Abrams and the British Challenger tanks fought in the Iraq desert without air-conditioning. Indias Arjun tank, too, has hardened electronics that function perfectly even in the Rajasthan summer.
-Now see, from Ive read, one of the big complaints with the Arjun was that the tanks fire control system has had serious problems with functioning in hot weather. Perhaps theyve addressed those problems?
That is sooo funny.
...sooo what the article says is that nothing that was assembled in India works?
lol
“...sooo what the article says is that nothing that was assembled in India works?”
If truth be told, it really isn’t India’s fault. World class tanks requires a combination of design talent and manufacturing capabilities that most countries simply don’t have. And getting those capabilities from scratch are incredibly difficult. And most countries with the capability would loathe to share their knowledge, as Russia has wisely chosen not to do with India in regards to the T-90.
America, Russia, and the EU can design and build great tanks because they have been in the business for the last 70 years.
The above 3 aside, only 2 other countries have competitive tank designs and the manufacturing competencies to crank them out by the thousands: China and Israel.
China did it after after decades of investment, espionage, and the good fortune of recruiting a bunch of Russian and Eastern European military scientists after the USSR collapsed.
Israel managed to do it all via their local talent pool. With such a small population, Israel’s Merkava tank is a pretty exceptional achievement.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.