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Need for IAF’s Strategic Thinking

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October 16, 2019

What is the issue?

  • The first Rafale fighter aircraft for the Indian Air Force (IAF) was recently handed over to Defence Minister Rajnath Singh in France.
  • Even as the Indian Air Force gets ready to welcome its new acquisitions, ad hocism should give way to strategic thinking.

What is the significance?

  • The receiving of Rafale fighter aircraft is the latest in a series of much-needed yet delayed steps to bolster the IAF’s combat capabilities.
  • The IAF has historically been one of the best-equipped forces in the region.
  • However, it has seen its advantage, particularly quantitative, against China and Pakistan narrow dramatically over the past two decades.
  • The IAF is today faced with the twin tasks -
    1. of having to acquire technological superiority over its two adversaries
    2. of gathering enough aircraft to start off any collusive misadventures
  • On the technological front, the Rafale jet offers an unprecedented air-to-air capability in the form of the MBDA Meteor missile.
  • [MBDA is a European developer and manufacturer of missiles]
  • Rafale also offers a new long-range precision strike capability with the MBDA’s SCALP air-launched cruise missile.
  • [The Storm Shadow / SCALP is a long-range, air-launched, stand-off attack missile]
  • Rafale also provides the IAF with a combat platform that is more completely and tightly integrated by the original equipment manufacturer.
  • This offers an advantage over any number of modified and upgraded aircraft presently in service.
  • The Indian government is paying to Dassault (for Rafale) to not only modify and certify the aircraft to an exacting specification but also to stand by its reliability in service.
  • This is something that has never been done with a fighter aircraft in Indian service to date.

What are the challenges to IAF’s air power?

  • Air power is an expensive business.
  • Moreover, there is a scenario where manpower and running costs consume a huge share of the budget.
  • Given this, the principal impediment to a comprehensive renewal of the IAF is a financial one.
  • As such, lower capital costs and lower sustainment costs have to go hand in hand.
  • In the indigenous option, the HAL’s Tejas Light Combat Aircraft is domestically produced and paid for mostly in rupees.
  • It is both fiscally attractive and certainly good enough to replace the IAF’s ageing MiG-21 and MiG-27 fleet as it stands.
  • However, non-compliance with a 1980s Air Staff Requirement (specifications for design and development of aircraft) and low production rates continue to raise questions about MIG’s future.

What are the other challenges?

  • Defence budgets have remained effectively flat for a long time, and with a slowing economy, an increase in capital outlay is not likely.
  • Procurement funding will also necessarily have to compete with funding for research and development for upcoming domestic projects.
  • These include the redesigned LCA Mk.2 and fifth-generation Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA).
  • Finally, even if all near-term procurements proceed to plan, there is still much to be desired.
  • These include training of air and ground crew, and building of infrastructure.
  • Besides, actually operationalising new types will pose their own challenges that will slow the effective rate of force accretion.
  • Neighbourhood - The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) and China’s People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) are not standing still.
  • The PAF is over-burdened with a number of legacy issues that are similar to the IAF.
  • Pakistan is however well placed to recapitalise a significant proportion of its air force with a relatively modern aircraft.
  • E.g. the availability of the Sino-Pak JF-17 cheaply and in numbers, along with access to a wide range of Chinese weaponry developed for the type
  • As China ramps up its fifth-generation aircraft programmes and unit costs drop, there is little doubt these platforms will also find their way into Pakistan.

What is the way forward?

  • While primarily oriented toward taking on the U.S. military in the Pacific and beyond, China’s formidable aerial arsenal cannot be ignored by India.
  • So, as the IAF gets ready to welcome its new acquisitions, it should be clear about the challenges it faces.
  • Notably, India’s strategic and operational environment is undergoing a dramatic transformation.
  • Ad hocism should give way to strategic thinking if these challenges are to be effectively met.

 

Source: The Hindu

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