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The Secret Nuke Sub Deal

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India Today:
DEFENCE: NUCLEAR SUBMARINE
The Secret Nuke Sub Deal


By Sandeep Unnithan

On June 15, 2008, the Indian Navy will commission the INS Chakra, a 12,000-tonne Akula-II class nuclear-powered attack submarine, from the far eastern Russian port of Vladivostok. The submarine, which is being built at a shipyard in Komsomolsk-on-Amur, marks the fruition of a $650-million (Rs 2,600 crore) secret deal signed by the NDA government three-and-a-half years ago, which said that India would finance the construction of an unfinished Russian nuclear submarine hull and then lease it for 10 years. The impending acquisition of the Chakra gives India the long-awaited third leg of the nuclear triad—the others being air and land-based nuclear delivery platforms—widely regarded as the most survivable mode of launching nuclear weapons.

“It is the most crucial strategic capability we are acquiring after testing nuclear weapons in 1998,” says strategic analyst Bharat Karnad. Manned by a specially trained Indian crew, the Chakra—named after Krishna’s weapon—will undertake a 15-day passage through the South China Sea, with no port calls, to India, where it will be formally inducted as a component of India’s strategic forces command.

Nuclear submarines use a miniature nuclear reactor, to produce steam, which drives a turbine. Capable of tremendous underwater speed and almost unlimited endurance, they are in fact limited only by the endurance of their crew. The Akula-II submarine’s speed of 35 knots and diving depth of 600 m is twice that of a conventionally powered submarine. “However, a nuclear submarine is much more than just a submarine with a nuclear reactor,” says Rear Admiral (retired) Raja Menon. “It is the arbiter of power at sea,” he adds.

Armed with indigenously built nuclear-tipped cruise missiles with a range of over 1,000 km, the Chakra will be a potent addition to India’s strategic arsenal. A need which was felt after the Pokhran tests of 1998 when India enunciated a nuclear doctrine of ‘no first use’ and nuclear forces based on a triad of aircraft, mobile land-based missiles and sea-based assets, to ensure that its nuclear deterrent was “effective, enduring, diverse, flexible, and responsive to the requirements of credible minimum deterrence”. While the road and rail-mobile Agni series missiles afforded the land-based legs of the triad, the focus quickly shifted on inducting submarines armed with nuclear weapons. India’s Advanced Technology Vessel (ATV), a euphemism for a nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine (SSBN) project initiated in the 1970s was still a decade from induction.

Hence talks on leasing two Akula class submarines—later reduced to one—were begun by the Vajpayee government after the Kargil War in 1999. Code-named Project (I), it was part of the three key naval items on the list of the Indian-Russian Inter-Governmental Commission on Military Technical Cooperation initiated by the government in 2002. The other two items on the list were the purchase of the Admiral Gorshkov aircraft carrier, and the lease of four Tu-22M strategic bombers (which has since been cancelled). Funds for the submarine lease were allotted by the Central Government, but never publicised. The deal for leasing the submarine was signed quietly in Delhi in January 2004 along with the Gorshkov deal, during Russian Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov’s visit.

Yet for years, the government denied plans of leasing nuclear submarines. Ivanov, too, consistently denied reports of the lease, but in 2005, the Russian daily Kommersant noted that the unaccounted for spike in the country’s arms export earnings indicated that the lease had been paid up.

The Chakra will soon be joined by the indigenous ATV, under construction at a secret dry dock in Visakhapatnam. Construction of the 5,000-tonne ATV, a modified version of the Russian Charlie-II class is now nearly complete, and will be launched for sea trials next year. It will be inducted into the Indian Navy in 2009. Armed with indigenously developed ballistic missiles (future variants with the three-stage 5000-km range Agni 3), the ATV will mark India’s entry into the SSBN club and will mean the fruition of a long-delayed strategic programme.

The delays seem to have moved to the Russian side. Originally slated for induction on August 15 this year, the delivery of the Chakra has been delayed by 10 months for the same reasons that delayed the Gorshkov refit in Russia. Earlier this year, Russia escalated the cost of the N sub lease by $135 million (Rs 540 crore), which was rejected by the Indian Defence Ministry delegation. Ministry officials confirmed the advanced stage of both the lease and the projects and said that the Government was debating on when to bring both the programmes out of the closet.

The lease of the Akula-II submarine—originally slated for the cash-strapped Russian Navy and on which construction had ceased at the Amur shipyard in the 1990s—will make India the world’s sixth power to operate a nuclear submarine. It has only one precedent—the three-year transfer of a Charlie-I class nuclear attack submarine (also named Chakra) from the Soviet Union in January 1988, which took advantage of a loophole in international treaties. The treaties prohibit the sale of nuclear submarines but do not object to a lease, provided the submarines are not equipped with nuclear weapons or missiles with a range of over 300 km. The Chakra will be stripped of its inventory of strategic cruise missiles with a range of 3,000 km, as these violate the Missile Technology Control Regime, but India will not be prevented from equipping the submarine with its own missiles.

The present 10-year lease—which may be extended later—differs from that of the Charlie-I class submarine in some important aspects. While the latter’s reactor controls and missile launch area were manned by Soviet naval personnel, the new Chakra will be manned entirely by an Indian crew, which is to leave for Vladivostok in December. Nearly 300 Indian naval personnel, or three sets of crews, have already been trained to man the submarine at a specially constructed facility in Sosnovy Bor, a small town near St Petersburg in Russia. All personnel returned after completion of training this year.

Future ATV crews will also be trained on the Chakra, which offers a valuable training platform. “A leased submarine gives you a tremendous headstart in training crews,” says Menon. “It takes several years to produce a crew of nuclear submarine experts like hydroplane operators and watch keeping officers.” The new Chakra will make up for the expertise that was lost when the Charlie-I submarine was returned to the former Soviet Union but also add a strategic platform into India’s inventory.
 
I simply dont know what to say, i would have said this report is ridiculous, but this is India Today reporting it, not some crappy magazine or Force type reports.

If its true, it would be...unimaginbly brilliant.
 
brilliant it might be!

but ummm....am sorry am too racist to accept this as level of brilliance for us being Pakistani!!!!

Conclusive comments: Not much impressive!!!!!!
 
Am i missing something here, no views on this seeing as this is something very very important in South Asia's scenario.
 
brilliant it might be!

but ummm....am sorry am too racist to accept this as level of brilliance for us being Pakistani!!!!

Conclusive comments: Not much impressive!!!!!!

Donot engage a debate unless you have some value to add to it! if the report is correct and I cernatainly hope its not this would totally change the ballance of power in Southern Asia giving India a second lauch capability!!

Racism is bad but ignorance is worse!! We should take this threat seriously!
 
Donot engage a debate unless you have some value to add to it! if the report is correct and I cernatainly hope its not this would totally change the ballance of power in Southern Asia giving India a second lauch capability!!

Racism is bad but ignorance is worse!! We should take this threat seriously!

Neo.
As Salam oAlaikum.
I wonder if it makes any difference. I dont think the Indians have bought a nuclear submarine keeping Pakistan in mind. It has always been obvious that Indian designs and vision includes the role of a regional power and , if true, this report points to another step in this direction. The Pak-India scenario with a view to second strike capability has already been covered by the conventional subs that the two nations have.
in any case, Allah forbid, if there is a war in the subcontinent, there may not be a need for second strike!!! i think these arguments are a thing of the past. What Pakistan probably still has not grasped is that the real war is already on going and we are sadly so far behind the times in it. This war is not conventional but is of an economic nature. this is a war that we should focus on not the conventional war , which in my opinion became a dead concept the day Pakistan tightened the last screws on its first nuclear weapon.Your comments would be appreciated.
WaSalam
Araz
 
Am i missing something here, no views on this seeing as this is something very very important in South Asia's scenario.

Excellent news!!! Seems like the NDA goverment did indeed do something in national interest afterall. ;-)

I only hope there are no delays with the ATV project, like all other defense projects.
 
The ATV is of paramount interest to the nation. This lease would probably be for the training and operations that a nuke sub can undertake, i think the timing if true would be very good. The training and experience gained from the old Charlie SSN that we leased has been all but frittered away.
 
Just two observations

1. Why is the date of the article 15 June 2008 ?
2. The writer I understand is the son of a naval officer of the Indian Navy so what he writes may be true and he definately knows apple from the oranges.

All the more reason for Pakistan to start seriously thinking of having a similiar stand off submarine in its inventory. It will give Uncle Sam and others second thoughts incase he/they want to enforce one sided strong arm policies. However it will be real uphill task.

Best Regards
 
That is not the date of the article. Read it again. :coffee:

Apologies my mistake. Two Indian nuclear submarines with nuclear missiles (sooner or later) will definately affect the power equation in the Indian Ocean. Both Pakistan and China will be planning countermeasures.

Regards
 
Neo.
As Salam oAlaikum.
I wonder if it makes any difference. I dont think the Indians have bought a nuclear submarine keeping Pakistan in mind. It has always been obvious that Indian designs and vision includes the role of a regional power and , if true, this report points to another step in this direction. The Pak-India scenario with a view to second strike capability has already been covered by the conventional subs that the two nations have.
in any case, Allah forbid, if there is a war in the subcontinent, there may not be a need for second strike!!! i think these arguments are a thing of the past. What Pakistan probably still has not grasped is that the real war is already on going and we are sadly so far behind the times in it. This war is not conventional but is of an economic nature. this is a war that we should focus on not the conventional war , which in my opinion became a dead concept the day Pakistan tightened the last screws on its first nuclear weapon.Your comments would be appreciated.
WaSalam
Araz

This guy Makes sense....

Yes India is looking forward to be a true blue water navy with a wide regional power projection and it is imperative that this project be completed on time...
 
I dont believe this crap until i see it in IN colours.
 

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