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India approves $2.6 billion mounted gun purchase

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India approved on Saturday the purchase of 814 mounted gun systems for the army at a cost of of 814 mounted gun systems for the army at a cost of 157.5 billion rupees ($2.55 billion), a defence ministry spokesman said.


India, already the world's largest arms importer, is in the midst of a $100 billion defence upgrade. In October, the new government approved long-delayed projects worth $13 billion to modernise hardware and boost the domestic defence industry.

In June, the government cleared defence deals worth $3.5 billion.


"The Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) today cleared the acquisition of 155 mm/52 calibre mounted gun systems worth 157.5 billion rupees," a defence ministry spokesman told reporters after the meeting, chaired by newly appointed defence minister Manohar Parrikar.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is accelerating the modernisation plan in an attempt to catch up with neighbour China's rising military air, sea and land power. India's poorly equipped soldiers often scuffle with western neighbour Pakistan and brush up against Chinese forces patrolling a disputed Himalayan border.

Some of the mounted guns will be imported, but most will be made in India in a collaborative effort between foreign companies and domestic manufacturers.

"The initial 100 guns would be imported, but the remaining 714 would have to be produced in India," the official said.

According to local media reports, Tata Power's Strategic Engineering Division unveiled its first mounted gun system on a Tata track in 2012. Other Indian competitors could be Mahindra Defence, L&T (LART.NS) and Bharat Forge (BFRG.NS) .

Parrikar also announced that the DAC would meet more frequently, at least once in a month, to expedite acquisition proposals, the official said.

India approves $2.6 billion mounted gun purchase - official | Reuters
 
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India has to end its dependence on others for the procurement of arms. It is still far behind in indigenous production capacity
 
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India has to end its dependence on others for the procurement of arms. It is still far behind in indigenous production capacity
True.. But directionally its going well. Its the speed that's screwed up.
 
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what type of guns would India be interested in buying and from what sources. anyone??
 
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India has to end its dependence on others for the procurement of arms. It is still far behind in indigenous production capacity
Well, all these guns except 100 light guns are made in India. Indian indigenous howitzer program is now well capable of meeting the needs of the army.
 
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Tata

TataPower155mmgun.jpg



L&T with Nexter

Caesar1.jpg


Bharat Forge ATMOS

atmos.jpg




couldn't find Mahindra Land System's Mounted Gun's pic....
 
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India has to end its dependence on others for the procurement of arms. It is still far behind in indigenous production capacity
This is true but that it doesn't diminish the military capabilities India is building up. An imported artillery gun will be just as lethal as an Indian artillery gun.

This is the new stick that is being used to beat India and detract from its military capacity.
 
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As long defence industry is run by govt, speed of delivery of goods will be screwed up. Strong case for divesting DRDO & HAL
HAL yes (and it is underway) but not DRDO- the DRDO need to remain 100% under GoI control. And many don't seem to understand the DRDO doesn't produce anything itself- it is purely a R&D organisation, the production issues are caused by DPSU and these need to be improved and more outsourced to the private players. The DRDO on its part is producing some truly exceptionally results these days and now a period of sustained high investment is going to produce even more results in the coming years.
 
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IA soldiers are done with Insas rifle( frequent jam,barrel swelling, poor accuracy, poor structural strength).
 
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