With Congress Programmed Only For Re-election, National Interests Subverted
With Congress Programmed Only For Re-election, National Interests Subverted
Why this indifference to Tejas fighter jet?
Last
updated on: December 11, 2012 11:15 IST
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Ask any of the 20-odd Indian Air Force test
pilots who have flown the Tejas Light Combat Aircraft and they will all swear
that it is a great fighter to fly. It handles beautifully, screams along at Mach
1.6 (2,000 kilometres per hour) and fires the full range of air-to-air and
air-to-ground weaponry. With 2,000 test flights under its belt, it has already
proven that it can fly and fight better than most fighters on the IAF inventory.
It is vastly superior to the MiG-21, and is not too far behind the Mirage
2000.
It
certainly outclasses the Pakistan Air Force JF-17 Thunder, a light fighter like
the Tejas, which Pakistan pretends to have developed jointly with China, but is
actually Chinese through and through. Unlike the Tejas -- a contemporary fighter
made of composite materials with an advanced design and sophisticated avionics
-- the JF-17 is an outdated design. But the PAF has already inducted 60 of these
fighters and will eventually operate 250 to 300 JF-17s, half its total
fleet.
Yet
the IAF is cool towards the Tejas. It is desperate for more fighters -- against
an assessed requirement of 42 fighter squadrons, the IAF has 34 squadrons today,
which will fall to 26 in 2017 if the Rafale is not inducted by then. But the IAF
chooses to live with this dangerous shortfall rather than inducting the Tejas
more quickly.
Tejas jet and Arjun tank have a common problem
Last
updated on: December 11, 2012 11:15 IST
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Why this indifference towards the Tejas, the alert citizen would
ask? She might also have noted a parallel: the Indian Army sticks with the
decrepit, night-blind Russian T-72 tank rather than embracing the far more
capable and modern Arjun. The Tejas and the Arjun have a common problem: they
are excellent indigenous designs that are undermined by poor production
quality.
Just as the Heavy Vehicles
Factory, Avadi, mismanaged by the Ordnance Factory Board, causes the army to
believe that the Arjun is unreliab#8804 similarly Hindustan Aeronautics Limited,
a public sector undertaking under the ministry of defence, makes the IAF
sceptical about the Tejas.
HAL's
poor production fails to translate the Tejas' contemporary design into a
reliable fighter that takes to the air day after day. Most of Tejas' problems
stem from poor production, not from an inadequate design. But they prevent the
fighter from flying, slowing down the flight-test programme and making the IAF
believe that the Tejas has serious reliability issues.
None
of this gives HAL sleepless nights, since it regards the Tejas as the problem of
the Aeronautical Development Agency, which oversees the LCA programme. HAL
prefers to focus on building foreign aircraft under licence, a mechanical task
that it has done for decades with ever-increasing levels of inefficiency.
HAL ill-inclined to engage in setting up Tejas assembly line
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The Sukhoi-30MKI, which was initially bought fully built from
Russia for Rs 30 crore per fighter, is now built by HAL (substantially from
Russian systems and sub-systems) for well over 10 times that figure. Building
expensively suits HAL well; since its profits are a percentage of production
costs, higher costs mean higher profit.
HAL's
indigenisation is nominal and restricted mainly to low-tech components.
High-tech assemblies and sub-assemblies are simply imported from Russia and
knocked together expensively into "HAL-built" fighters. Everyone is happy: HAL
makes hefty profits; Russia sells lots of Sukhoi-30 kits; and the IAF would much
rather rely on Sukhoi-built assemblies than on HAL's dodgy manufacture.
With
so much money flowing in from assembly line manufacture, HAL is ill-inclined to
engage in the messy business of setting up an assembly line for the indigenous
Tejas.
For
decades, HAL has obtained production drawings, tools and jigs from abroad, most
recently from BAE Systems for manufacturing the Hawk trainer.
In
building an assembly line for the Tejas, HAL will have nobody to pass the buck
to. The ad hoc Tejas assembly line, which HAL set up two years ago to build 40
Tejas Mark I fighters by 2017, has not yet produced its first fighter.
HAL gets away thanks to its cosy relationship with MoD
Last
updated on: December 11, 2012 11:15 IST
|
Now a foreign consultant will teach HAL to do what it has done for
decades. HAL gets away with its disinterest in the Tejas thanks to its cosy
relationship with the MoD.
Each year the ministry releases
a photo of the HAL chairman handing over a large cardboard dividend cheque to
the defence minister, as if A K Antony were being presented the Man of the Match
award for some intra-office cricket match.
But,
in successive photo releases, Mr Antony appears glummer and glummer -- and that
is probably because the realisation is dawning on him that a technology
company's success is measured not in financials but in technological
breakthroughs and user satisfaction.
In
those departments, HAL is deep in the red.
HAL
must work with the ADA to set up the Tejas Mark I assembly line and to churn out
the aircraft in numbers. The ADA's eagerness to develop the Tejas Mark II has
resulted in the neglect of the Mark I, which is shaping up as an adequate light
fighter for the IAF.
The
MoD must ensure that the Mark I design is stabilised, it is built in numbers,
operated by the IAF and user feedback obtained. Only after that should the ADA
design the Mark II with well-considered enhancements. And HAL must be held to
high production standards and low production costs.
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