Centre clears crucial plan for submarines, Predator drones

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Himalaya Harbinger, Rudrapur Bureau

The Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on Wednesday cleared the indigenous construction of two nuclear-powered conventional strike submarines (SSNs) and the acquisition of 31 Predator missile-firing drones from US-based General Atomics in a big boost to Indian military capability that will deter regional adversaries.

With China already possessing six Shang class nuclear-powered attack submarines and the leasing of the Akula class nuclear attack submarine from Russia being delayed to 2028, the Modi government approved for construction of two SSNs, which will be based on Indian designs. India already has three nuclear-powered ballistic missile-firing submarines (SSBNs) as part of its nuclear triad

While the SSN project remains classified, the Indian Navy wanted the government to sanction at least two submarines in order to deter India’s adversaries in the Indo-Pacific. It is believed to have raised the issue with the Prime Minister in January. SSNs can stay underwater for long periods of time and their endurance is only determined by crew fatigue and supplies; in contrast, diesel-electric submarines have to surface at least once a day to charge their batteries through snorkel. It is during this period that diesel attack submarines are vulnerable to aerial strikes. While diesel submarines equipped with air-independent propulsion can stay underwater for longer periods of time , they have to compromise on the weapons on board as well as speed.

The acquisition of 31 Predator drones armed with Hellfire missiles, GBU-39B precision-guided bombs and high-fire rotary cannon, was once again spearheaded by the Indian Navy. Out of the 31 drones, 16 will be given to the Indian Navy, the remaining will be split between the Indian Army and the Indian Air Force. The deal must be signed before October 31 or else the price negotiations will have to be commenced afresh as per initial contracts and US approvals, people familiar with the matter said.

While some of the 31 acquired drones will be assembled locally with 30% components sourced from Indian suppliers, the unmanned vehicle will not have any DRDO-developed missile as the cost of integrating a missile is prohibitive; doing so will also mean the lack of guarantees.

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