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Indian Navy ship nearly collided with U.S. tanker

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Indian Navy ship nearly collided with U.S. tanker
From Indian news net: Sunday Guardian:The Sunday Guardian || HOME
Indian Navy ship nearly collided with U.S. tanker
According to a US naval officer, the Indian sailors appeared unprofessional, clueless and poorly trained.
VISHAL THAPAR New Delhi | 8th Mar 2014
ins_delhi--365_1394304735.jpg


A frontline Indian Navy destroyer came very close to colliding with an American ship during a joint India-United States naval exercise. This has been disclosed by a US Navy officer on a public blog and in a follow-up AMA (Ask Me Anything) session between his readers and the author. The officer has also been severely critical of the professional standards of the Indian Navy. The blog was taken off after the Indian Navy took severe exception to the damning disclosure. The Sunday Guardian has a copy of the contents of the blog.

The revelation comes at a time when the Navy is in crisis following a string of accidents, which forced the resignation of Admiral D.K. Joshi.

The American officer, a lieutenant, serving on an Arleigh Burke destroyer of the US 7th Fleet, was an exchange officer for five days on the INS Delhi, the Indian flagship that participated in the India-US Malabar naval exercise in the Pacific.

"Their captain was driving the ship when it came within 50 feet of the stern of a USNS replenishment ship and at any given time there were multiple officers on the bridge screaming at each other. They were generally clueless and had almost zero seamanship skills," he claims.

A distance of just 50 feet between two large warships in choppy waters on the high seas qualifies as a near collision. The account suggests that the INS Delhi was approaching the US replenishment ship (a fuel tanker) to practice refuelling from an allied ship. The implications of a fully armed destroyer colliding with a floating oil tanker are very serious. An Indian Navy rear admiral was then on board the INS Delhi.

In a stunning indictment, the US Navy exchange officer observes that there was "no concept of safety of navigation... Absolutely did not adhere to rules of the road".

"Well, coming within 50 feet of another ship at sea is never a good sign. But, afterwards, the general consensus/excuse that they came up with during their mini-debrief was 'Oh well, rough seas, better luck next time' not 'holy ******* ****, we parted a tensioned wire cable made of braided steel under hundreds of thousands of pounds of tension'," he wrote.

The exchange officer — a surface warfare specialist — took a dim view both of the leadership style and also the fighting capability of the Indian Navy. "They could barely avoid hitting other ships in the middle of the Pacific, I doubt they'd be popping off any rounds (firing ammunition) with any amount of accuracy," he states.

Asked by a reader how he would rate the Indian Navy's chances in war, the officer responded, "I would be surprised if most of their gear worked. The stuff I saw (I got a pretty extensive tour) looked like it fell straight out of the 60s and 70s and I would be genuinely flabbergasted if they got any rounds off... Truthfully, after touring their ship extensively I would be very much surprised if the majority of their armament even successfully fired, let along hit anything."

When questioned, a senior Indian Navy officer dismissed the impression of the American officer. "Leading navies of the world have a healthy respect for the Indian Navy. Interaction and exchanges with the US Navy have only increased since this blog appeared. On the basis of its capability, the Indian Navy is among the world's most sought after navies for exercises and interaction," he claimed.

But observers are taking it more seriously because these are not just random observations but a detailed critique, even while accounting for some exaggerations and over-generalisation. "The engineering practices were abysmal....No electrical safety whatever. No operational risk management. No concept of safety of navigation," the US officer inferred.

In his view, the Indian sailors were casual about safety issues and were seen wearing sandals during important activities such as fuel replenishment and helicopter operations from the flight deck of the ship, and even in engineering spaces. "They legitimately didn't understand why I was wearing steel-toed flight deck boots. Things like these aren't cultural differences, they are golden exhibitions of their sheer lack of common sense and seamanship," he wrote.
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Even more revealing are the American officer's observations on Indian leadership style, which is described as over-centralised, even feudal. "They don't entrust their people with any responsibility until they are very senior Lieutenants (O-3s) and junior Lieutenant Commanders (O-4s). At this point in the US Navy there are literally guys commanding ships, and these guys couldn't even be trusted to handle a radio circuit," the American observed.

He went on to describe the leadership style and the onboard culture as "extremely hierarchical and classist, even from a military standpoint", suggesting that all decisions are taken only by the captain, the executive officer (No. 2) and the navigation officer.

Clearly, rattled by what he describes as a near-collision between the INS Delhi and the US tanker, and the chaos on the bridge during that time, he scores the Indian Navy's sea skills at 3 out of 10, and blames it on faulty training. "They had some marginally competent folks, but for every one person who was half-competent, there were 4 other guys just standing around looking clueless. I would say that it's a fault in their training, because they have more than enough people running around not doing anything of particular use," he noted.

Repeated accidents in the Indian Navy may be giving more currency to the lieutenant's damning critique.
 
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So it came from a blog from a US navy officer who doesn't have a name, kinda similar to the other old story where another US soldier apparently worked on a Indian navy ship and surprisingly enough he also didn't give his name, this is interesting:coffee:.
 
IN is surely going through hard time
 
This was a BS thread on Reddit a few years back that was well and truly ripped apart at the time.....

Every now and then some idiot comes along and opens a thread here pretending this is legitimate news or is something new....:coffee:



@WebMaster @Oscar please see that this thread is :closed:
 
Despite the so called 'unprofessional', ill equipped and naive display by the Indian Navy, the American Navy has been keen to continue to conduct exercises with the Indian Navy ALMOST every year, since 2002.

I wish I had the chance to be present at the 'Ask me anything' session with the honourable Navy Officer, just to be able to ask him 'To what do we owe the pleasure of having your highly sophisticated battle ships and competitive man power being involved in a joint exercise with the Indian Navy, and that too almost every year since 2002, if the latter is so incompetent.'

Another of the American propaganda of destabilizing the morale of other countries armed forces and show casing their superiority. Agreed the Navy has been having a tough time recently, thanks to the MoD but this is utterly disgusting.
 
This news is also quoting the same blog as OP .
But, I think this blog is credible. If he said that PM of India bala bala or India will bala bala that's incredible. He only said what he saw and felt during his 5 days on India's destroyer at India-US exercise, this would be very credible, That's why Sunday Guardian believe of his blog
 
But, I think this blog is credible. If he said that PM of India bala bala or India will bala bala that's incredible. He only said what he saw and felt during his 5 days on India's destroyer at India-US exercise, this would be very credible, That's why Sunday Guardian believe of his blog
It was debunked years ago- FACT, if I can I'll hunt down that reddit blog and silence this nonsense once and for all. The sunday guardian running it, whilst it doesn't surprise me, just shows how pathetic the Indian media is- little to no journalistic practices are followed and they are so desperate to jump on band wagon and bash whoever is in vogue at the time they don't even check out facts.
 
But, I think this blog is credible. If he said that PM of India bala bala or India will bala bala that's incredible. He only said what he saw and felt during his 5 days on India's destroyer at India-US exercise, this would be very credible, That's why Sunday Guardian believe of his blog

But there is no credibility ,if the person is an actual sailor or he has saw a warship in real time.

He may well be like a lowlife troll of pakistani or chinese orgin that we encounter daily in this forum for all we know .
 
Here we go, the original Reddit thread (from 2011):

IAmA US Naval Officer who spent 5 days onboard an Indian Navy warship, INS Delhi. AMA. : IAmA


Note that Reddit admin have deleted this loser's comments:

PrEiR.png



TlJ1O.png



PrEiR.png




Look, this has even been posted and discussed on PDF in the past:


US Naval Officer spent 5 days onboard an Indian Navy warship, INS Delhi



I'll copy what I wrote on that thread at the time:

If you actually read the guy's posts you will see that he doesn't divulge any details you or I couldn't readily find on the Internet. And when asked to provide picture proof of his stay on the Delhi he posts a link to a pic of INS DELHI on Wikipedia (because his camera and phone were damaged, conveniently, on the way to INS DELHI) ! And read the comments on the same page by "exnavy1342" an ex-IN officer who categorically contradicts EVERYTHING this fool has to say, to which the member, strangely, has nothing to say and doesn't even respond to. Strange? Not really, he got called out and is trying to avoid it as much as possible.

I seriously doubt this man is who he says he is and is certainly not a USN officer and has definelty never visited a INS. firstly USN personnel, especially officers, are EXTREMELY courteous, professional and diplomatic and would never make such arrogant, rude and offensive remarks in an open forum like this especially not with such impotus put on developing Indo-US ties- a USN officer would be well aware of the serious repercussions such comments could cause to his career and his country. Secondly anyone who has ACTUALLY visited an INS (I'm not saying I have but a few good friends of mine have) would know that the IN is a thoroughly professional force and runs a "tight-ship" (forgive the pun) with safety and hygiene standards being rigourosly enforced. The fact that the IN is inducting state of the art ships is neither here nor there as they have always had strict standards.

Just to have a visual aid check out the navy-related programs from here:

NDTV » News » Videos
Indian Navy Air Craft Carrier INS Virat - 1 - YouTube

The ep with INS Mumbai and INS VIRAAT perfectly illustrate this.




It is clear this is just biased propaganda with no real merit, every foreign navy that interacts with the IN can't praise them high enough. If the IN was such a shambles why are they so effective and are able to successfully complete EVERY mission given to them? (look at IN's history to see what I'm talking about).




End of story.




What a joke the Sunday Guardian is for running this story though, how pathetic is this reporter? I'd urge all my Indian freinds to complain to this publication- what they have done is unacceptable.




@Oscar @WebMaster once again I ask you to close this thread.
 
This Ask Me Anything was paraded for days previously too,
Its not even close to credible, its like the taking into account the opinion and accounts of so called "professionals" here seriously.
 
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