India's arms acquisition process needs an overhaul: report

The rules and laws of the ordnance factories restrict India’s strategic potential in advanced technology production

trithesh

Trithesh Nandan | October 31, 2012




With India becoming the world’s largest spender on military equipment, in the recent years, most of its deals have come under accusation of corruption and middlemen swindling money out of deals. A recent study by a Swedish think tank said that India had surpassed China to become the world’s largest arms importer. Despite such high-ticket weapons procurement, a latest policy paper by the Delhi-based think tank questions India’s decision making process for arms acquisition.  

“A PPBES model (planning, programming, budgeting, evaluation system) has not been developed, as also an independent verification agency that validates the decision-making steps and reports independently to its highest decision making authority,” says the policy paper titled ‘Recommendations on Arms Procurement Reforms in India’.

According to an estimate, India plans $80 billion dollars for military modernisation in the next three years. The policy paper talks not just about weapons’ acquisition but also about acquisition of technology.

“Acquisition plans that are not integrated with technology plans of other government agencies lead to lack of coordination, inter-operability, logistical and financial mismanagement,” says the 34-page paper authored by defence analyst Ravindra Pal Singh.

The paper criticises the style of working of ordnance factories and says its rules and laws restrict India’s strategic potential in advanced technology production. “These rules and laws were made in the 50s when an infant India had a very low productivity threshold. These laws have not yet been liberalised,” says the paper. 

It also notes that India’s policy is tangled in mandatory implementation procedures of industrial offsets that are sought by its private sector lobbies. As India has become the world’s largest arms importer, the paper suggests, “What India needs is an advanced technology investment programme for building up its R&D capabilities to participate in global supply chain in key advanced technologies.”

However, the paper also says that India’s offset policy is a generation older than those of other nations. “A consortium could be set up by clubbing the ministry of defence, the private sector defence industries, the venture capitalists, foreign technology suppliers and the academic research centres in 17 key technology areas,” the paper mentions.

Few suggestions:
•         The three armed services should develop R&D laboratories and co-locate them with their major research centres that work on the operational-tactical doctrines.
•         Integration of advanced engineering knowledge with combat experience is the key to technology innovation and for narrowing the technology obsolescence gap.
•         The DRDO has to replace its triple-hatted model with a competitive and flexible model so as to develop strategic and major weapons systems and for acquisition of key advanced technologies.
•         Defining and developing key advanced technologies acquisition and industrial integration plan.
•         Military leaders trained on the basis of ‘maximal user concept’ receive tertiary training in science and engineering to become developers of new products.

Read the report.
 

Comments

 

Other News

Testing the teachers, moving the goalposts

A teacher was appointed in 1999, before the Right to Education (RTE) Act came into force, and appointed under the rules that existed at that time. She gave the necessary test, passed it, passed the interview, and was appointed. Over the next 26 years, she taught thousands of children, faced transfer orde

`Focus on infra, reforms, digital connectivity has created strong foundation for growth`

In a step towards the operationalisation of the Bharat Audyogik Vikas Yojana (BHAVYA), union minister of commerce & industry Piyush Goyal launched the BHAVYA Portal on Monday in New Delhi.   Addressing the gathering, Goyal said that the BHAVYA scheme will adopt a competit

Govt, RBI announce major reforms to attract FPI

The finance ministry on Friday announced a series of measures aimed at enhancing the ease of investment for individual Persons Resident Outside India (PROIs) and Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs), and to attract stable long-term foreign capital flows.   Building on the recent in

Lessons in climate adaption from world’s largest inhabited river island

Majuli Island, perched between the Brahmaputra River to the south and east, the Subansiri River to the west, and a branch of the Brahmaputra to the north, has been severely affected by recurrent flooding and intense riverbank erosion. Despite its global importance in acquiring UNESCO tentative status for

Careless whispers and the impossible trinity

Time can never mend, the careless whispers of …    As the RBI marches ahead, for the upcoming monetary policy meeting this June, whispers from the corridors echo around several policy options to defend the rupee – by deploying forex reserves, raising in

Bullet Train Project: Third mountain tunnel breakthrough achieved

A major engineering milestone has been achieved in the Mumbai–Ahmedabad Bullet Train Project with the successful breakthrough of the third mountain tunnel (MT-07) at Ambesari village in Dahanu Taluka of Palghar district, Maharashtra.   With this achievement, three mountain





Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter