RayC wrote:It is not the IA’s mindset or history that prevents induction of indigenous equipment.
That is true. If you read carefully again, you will note what I think is the problem is the Indian Army's INSTITUTIONAL FAILING as the primary cuase.
Why are we buying Maruti cars instead of the warhorse Ambassadors?
By the logic you are arguing, you will be buying the "warhorse" Ambassador instead!. Dont belive me ?. Consider this. You had the proven "A" segment cars from Maruti/Suzuki the 800, the Alto and now the latest version the "A Star" . Which one will you buy, the latest "A Star" which got recalled for a fuel leak problem with O rings and solenoids or the previous version the "Alto" , which is proven over millions of cars and billions of passenger miles? .
Look at the problems at Toyota, a brand that made it's name for bullet proof and indestructible reliability. Why the post 2003/4 odd models are in trouble ?. Is it because of the introuction of drive by wire systems ?. So are you going to buy a 2004 Toyota Camry instead of a 2010 Camry?
That means for technology improvement, one should sacrifice the Armed Forces lives. I fail to see the logic! Wars are not video games! It all about lives and winning the war!
The answer bluntly is YES, that is unfortunately how engineering works. It is the accumulated wisdom of real world learning , experience and feedback that gets reflected in future generations of products.
Just google around and find out what is/was called the "Lawn Dart" (hint, we are looking to buy it ..shocking innit?) . Also, find out just how many were killed in the "Lawn Dart's" development, test and induction phases . And those lives lost mind you that is for just
ONE product. Also google around for something called V22 Osperey. Find out how many lives have been lost for the Osperey until now. It will shock you. The Osperey is NOT YET in full service!
The problem with India is until recently we did not have the industrial base to build weapons, but could only import . The insitutional mindset in the Army reflects that. Now India has the industrial base (when I mean India,I mean the country and not the babu /DPSU/DRDO monkeydom), so that mindset should change. The reason why the others are spending time, treasure, effort and yes LIVES on developing new weapons is becuase they know that they will be fighting Tomorrows Wars with YESTERDAY's weapons if they dont!. That is why.
Let us not quote the West. They have fought no wars after WW II. We are ever since Independence in the ‘war’ mode. Therefore, there is no comparison.
Surely this is joke. There was something called the cold war on which untold wealth was spent in developing all kinds of weapons and they were literally on hair trigger. If you want a "hot war" how about Korea, Vietnam, all the Arab Isreali wars (which created the Isreali Arms industry), Afghanistan (US and USSR) and not to mention Gulf Wars. Learnings from each of those wars went to develop next gen weapons.. Vietnam experience led to the "Teen Series" fighters. Gulf War led to unmanned vehicles.
I agree, that India's strategy until the 70s was correct. But what we missed out on what the Isrealis did, that is develop a robust indigenous industry. Isreal is a far smaller country which faced/faces a far greate existential threat than us and are in perennial "war mode" . Even they dont import nearly as much as we do and have fielded far greater number of systems!.
It must also be understood that induction does not mean one or two tanks or even 124. It means laying out a production line. That costs money. And if it turns out to be a lemon, who will cover the cost for a useless project? CAG will go all guns going and people like you will burn time on the internet as to how foolish all were!
That is why product development is risky. But remember, no risk, no gain!. If you dont risk developing drive by wire systems because of "risk" , you will be history becuase your competitors who have the guts to take risks will!.
It is another misnomer that one buys equipment and then fits into the op doctrines. In fact it is the reverse.
Not true. In reality, your op doctrine is circumsribed by the choice of weapon platforms that you have and that is always limited because of cost, geo strategic concerns and what exactly fits your op doctrine may really not be available to you. If for instance the Abrams was the "best tank" suited to the op doctrine you had in mind in the 80s, so what? It was probably not available to you anyways.
I agree that the Armed Forces ask for the Moon when they formulate their GSQR. The DRDO should tell them what is feasible or not. They go over the Moon asked by the Armed Forces and Armed Forces are delighted.
Those are institutional failings. When the army actually partners in development and the guy who do that, all that will get worked out. So first get the institutional failings fixed.
And then they fail to deliver not only what they promised over the moon but less than the moon!! That is the harsher reality!
Right. They were set up to fail. They then failed. So you go get some other system (like T-90) which really doesnt seem to be all that it was said to be has failings in real world and then scramble to fix it , coz your backside is exposed if the fixes dont happen.. Somehow all that rhetoric of "lives" , 'winning wars" etc get lost in that scramble.
The point I am making is that you cant win tomorrows wars with yesterday's weapons. If you dont go through the pain and trouble and hopefully not shedding blood during development , you surely will be battered and bleeding in war.