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Why does not India possess an indigenous arms industry?

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Equipment of the Indian Army - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

plz urself decides that whether India is able to make small fire arms like revolver, pistols, machine guns, grenades, rocket launchers, small missile launchers as anti air or anti tank;
missiles like the anti tank, anti aircraft guns, CIWS like phlanx 1B CRAM gun, Radars, Vehicles like trucks and other engineering vehicles.
howitzers and tops(guns). etc. etc. plz tick mark which u believe India has power to built.

I think In any weapon of which the some option is available in world defence ministry must purchase it and do not finance properly to the DRDO to complete the project. and in which no option is available we are producing the best.

like Missiles Akash, Shaurya, Prahaar, Agni-1 etc. etc.

Small firearms are small value items. There are so many countries which are supplying india with small firearms. What a spectacle!

Probably the highest value weapons that you are able to sell overseas are some jv helicopters at several million USD each.

Most of the indian sales are spare parts which tend to be of relatively low values. I think SIPRI should open a category for ranking of sales of spare parts for weapons by countries. Many people will be interested in knowing how this segment of the arms import and export are going in the world.
 
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As long as there is monopoly of public sector and limited contributions from private sector, i don't see any change.

Why government has failed to encourage private sector in defence production

Since early-February, when the Indian defence establishment was shaken by the arrest of Finmeccanica chairman in Italy for graft in selling helicopters to India, defence minister AK Antony has repeatedly said that his ministry will strive for greater indigenisation. At a seminar on February 20, in a statement he has repeated at least thrice since, Antony said the government intends to change two key policies to allow the private sector a greater role.

This line is of some vintage. At least since 2002, it has been the stated policy of the government to encourage private sector participation in defence production. But companies say the ministry's actions run contrary to this claimed ideal. Large engineering companies that invested crores of rupees into what they hoped would be a new stream of business are today staring at an uncertain future for their investment.

Tata Power SED, Larsen & Toubro, Mahindra & Mahindra, Bharat Forge, Ashok Leyland and many others have invested in developing defence capabilities and are prepared to invest much more. But they face an uncertain policy environment, and staunch opposition from a powerful union of defence public sector employees that opposes any move the government makes to allow the private sector a leg in.

The government made its most significant move in 2006, when it added a new category in the Defence Procurement Procedure, a key policy document governing purchases. Under this 'make' category, for the first time, the private sector was allowed to wholly design and develop complex systems, with the government funding 80% of the development cost.

Further, the government announced two projects, with a combined value of Rs 60,000 crore, under the 'make' category: the TCS (Tactical Communication System) and the FICV (Future Infantary Combat Vehicle) projects. "A year and a half ago, it seemed as if at least the announced programmes in the 'make' category were moving forward," says Madhukar Kotwal, president (heavy engineering) at L&T. "Although the pace was slow, the direction gave us some hope." Kotwal says these programmes are showing little progress. "So somehow, the government's oft-stated position of encouraging participation of the private sector and the reality on the ground don't point in the same direction," he adds. "This has created disappointment and uncertainty."

For 2012-13, the union budget allocated Rs 89 crore for the 'make' project. For 2013-14, this amount was slashed to Rs 1 crore, even as India was confirmed as the world's largest importer of defence systems for the third year running and the Italian helicopter deal threw up old questions about the greasy nature of defence imports.

In Rollback Mode

Most advanced nations are neither dependent on defence imports nor do they have their governments doing all the work in the purchase chain, to the exclusion of the private sector. Those governments outline what they want from, say, a fighter jet and provide financial support to private companies to develop prototypes; the winning model (sometimes a combination of multiple prototypes) gets a massive contract.

Take the US, which imported just 10% of its $698 billion military spend, according to a March 2012 BCG report titled 'Creating a Vibrant Domestic Defence Manufacturing Sector'. Its Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), credited with developing some of the most advanced defence technologies, works closely with private companies such as Boeing, Northrop Grumman and Lockheed Martin.

India's 'make' programme was supposed to incentivise the private sector as per the so-called 'DARPA model'. In 2010, the defence ministry invited three private players (Tata Motors, Mahindra Group and L&T) and one public sector entity (Ordnance Factory Board) for the FICV project—potentially a Rs 50,000 crore project to replace some 2,600 units of the army's BMP-2 infantry vehicles. But, in October 2012, the ministry withdrew its letter of intent and the project has gone back to the drawing board. Such about-turns cost companies. According to an industry executive, a detailed project report, typically, costs about 1% of the project size.

Compared to the FICV project, the TCS project made more progress. In June 2012, the government shortlisted two parties for this $2 billion project: a consortium of L&T, Tata Power SED and HCL, and state-owned Bharat Electronics. Almost a year has passed and there has been little progress.

The timeline of this project is illustrative of the pace of the ministry's decision-making in contracts involving potential private participation. The 'make' policy was announced in 2006, the TCS project under it in 2008, and the letters of intent were issued in 2010. Another two years went by in the process known as 'down-selection', in which the ministry narrows down the participants. But, as of today, five years after the government first announced the project, there is little to show for by way of progress.

A defence ministry spokesperson said he was unable to comment for this story. "Intensive consultations are on to revise both the defence procurement procedure and the defence production policy to increase the private industry's role," spokesperson Sitansu Kar said. "It would be inappropriate to comment at this point." Public Sector Monopoly

India's defence production is almost entirely controlled by state-owned entities. R&D is done by DRDO (Defence Research and Development Organisation), while the manufacturing is done by nine defence PSUs (public sector undertakings) and the Ordnance Factory Board, which runs 41 ordnance factories around the country.

According to the BCG report, the DPSUs and ordnance factories employ about 180,000 people; the DRDO another 30,000. Although they manufacture Rs 35,000 crore of defence equipment a year, their productivity is abysmal. The BCG report cited a finance ministry survey to show that productivity in the state-owned defence sector was the lowest among all industries—Rs 15 lakh per employee per year—and half of the national average.

For a country with such a large defencemanufacturing base, India is unique in its dependence on imports. Countries such as UK and France, which employ a comparable number in the defence sector, are large exporters of weapons. India, in stark contrast, is the world's largest importer, sending 70% of its defence acquisition budget overseas.

India uses about 30% of its defence acquisition budget—Rs 86,740 crore this fiscal—to import directly, and sends most of the rest to defence PSUs. They, in turn, spend nearly half of that money overseas as well, through an opaque process that sometimes involves a single vendor selected at the executives' discretion. The New Delhi-based think-tank Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA) puts the collective import dependency of defence PSUs at 35-45%.

Politics Of Continuity

The political pressure to perpetuate this system is immense. A statist mindset that glorifies defence PSUs, and the large and unionised workforce that opposes privatisation, both exert pressure on minister Antony, who lends a sympathetic ear to such concerns. "The workforce at defence PSUs are unionised and will not allow any reforms," says Laxman Behera, a research fellow at IDSA. The All-India Defence Employees Federation and other unions oppose any move by the government to allow the industry any space, saying this will compromise national security.

The other problem that structurally poses a hurdle to private sector participation is the office of secretary, defence production. This office, which reports to the defence secretary, is responsible for defence production, and the performance of defence PSUs and the Ordnance Factory Board.

The incentive is to send orders to the companies under this office's watch and keep the private sector out. Consequently, the order books of defence PSUs such as Hindustan Aeronautics and Bharat Dynamics are multiples of their turnover. "This is one of the biggest policy reforms we need to make," says Behera. "How to bring the private sector into the government sector, and how to make the government responsible for the growth of private industry."

But for every step forward, the government also takes a step back. In 2005, the Vijay Kelkar committee on defence acquisition recommended that select private sector firms be given the status of 'Raksha Udyog Ratnas'—and the government treat them on equal footing with defence PSUs when allocating business. In 2007, the ministry examined 40 companies and found 15 eligible for the status. But in the wake of strident opposition from defence PSUs, the proposal was shelved in 2010.

The ministry unveiled a defence production policy in 2011, spelling out a major role for the private industry. It said all long-term needs should be met indigenously and the ministry would "proactively encourage" a larger involvement of the private sector. There has been little action since. "That policy was a path-breaking step," says Rajinder Bhatia, executive vice-president and head of defence at the $2.5 billion Kalyani Group. "The government has shared its intent with us, but not specifics. There has been no action, and that places a question mark on the intent itself."

Private Sector Dilemma

This wavering intent on the government's part is leaving private companies in the awkward situation where their risk and capital is not being duly rewarded. For example, L&T and Tata Power SED have long worked with DRDO on strategic projects. The two companies built the Pinaka multibarrel rocket launcher. They, along with Walchandnagar Industries, played a major role in building INS Arihant, India's first nuclear-powered submarine.

Despite demonstrated success, the establishment has been unwilling to lend a sympathetic ear to their projects. In December 2012, Tata Power SED displayed an artillery gun—52 mm-calibre, top range of 50 km—with 52% indigenous components. For three months now, the company has been requesting the ministry to allow them to test fire from a military firing range. The response hasn't been encouraging, even though India has large artillery gun acquisitions lined up. "They haven't said no, so that is a relief," says Rahul Chaudhry, CEO of Tata Power SED. "For how long will the life of our soldiers and national security be held hostage by the narrow interests of unions?" he adds. L&T and Bharat Forge are also developing howitzers.

The larger problem is that the state-run defence set up has not kept pace with the country's industrial abilities. "Normally the defence industry and defence research helps to expand a country's industrial capability," says Bhatia. "In India, it lags the existing industrial capability in the country." Even India's celebrated success with software is not harnessed for the increasingly automated weapon systems. On the other hand, nearly every major defence and aerospace companies in the world get Indian software firms to code for them.

Bharat Karnad, research professor for security studies at the Centre for Policy Research, says the demonstrated ability of the private sector was being ignored and this could prove costly. He points out how L&T and Tata did most of the "practical work" for INS Arihant. "Yet, we are still looking overseas for the next conventional submarine project," he says. "The government doesn't treat the private sector as a national resource. That is a mistake. This kind of reliance on imports is dangerous because all military suppliers have a history of choking supplies during a crisis."

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India's entire defence exports since 1950

Transfers of major conventional weapons: sorted by recipient. Deals with deliveries or orders made for year range 1950 to 2012
Note: The &#8216;No. delivered/produced&#8217; and the &#8216;Year(s) of deliveries&#8217; columns refer to all deliveries since the beginning of the contract. Deals in which the recipient was involved in the production of the weapon system are listed separately. The &#8216;Comments&#8217; column includes publicly reported information on the value of the deal. Information on the sources and methods used in the collection of the data, and explanations of the conventions, abbreviations and acronyms, can be found at URL <http://www.sipri.org/contents/armstrad/at_data.html>. The SIPRI Arms Transfers Database is continuously updated as new information becomes available.
Source: SIPRI Arms Transfers Database
Information generated: 04 April 2013


Recipient/ Year Year(s) No.
supplier (S) No. Weapon Weapon of order/ of delivered/
or licenser (L) ordered designation description licence deliveries produced Comments


Bangladesh
S: India 4 DHC-3 Otter Light transport ac (1971) 1971 4 Ex-Indian; aid
(30) Model-56 105mm Towed gun 1971 1971 (30) Ex-Indian
1 DHC-4 Caribou Transport aircraft 1972 1972 1 Ex-Indian; aid
(3) SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter (1972) 1973 (3) Ex-Indian; no. could be 4
2 Ford Patrol craft (1973) 1973-1974 2 Ex-Indian; Bangladeshi designation Padma

Bhutan
S: India 1 Mi-4A/Hound-A Helicopter 1968 1968 1 Ex-Indian; aid
(1) MPV APV (2003) 2004 (1)

Ecuador
S: India 6 Druhv Helicopter 2008 2009 6 $50 m deal (incl 1 more for VIP transport); for SAR

Ghana
S: India 12 HT-2 Trainer aircraft 1958 1959 12

Guinea Bissau
S: India 1 SDB Mk-3 Patrol craft (1992) 1993 1 Ex-Indian

Maldives
S: India (2) BRDM-2 Reconnaissance AV (1991) 1992 2 Ex-Indian; designation uncertain
(2) Ferret APV (1991) 1992 2 Ex-Indian; designation uncertain
1 SDB Mk-5 Patrol craft 2006 2006 1 Ex-Indian (but only 4 years old); Maldive designation Hurawee
1 Druhv Helicopter 2009 2010 1 Aid

Mauritius
S: India 1 Ford Patrol craft (1974) 1974 1 Ex-Indian; for coast guard
1 Do-228MP MP aircraft 1989 1990 1 Aid; for coast guard
1 SDB Mk-2 Patrol craft 1993 1993 1 Ex-Indian; $3.5 m deal; for coast guard
1 Do-228MP MP aircraft (2004) 2004 1 For coast guard

Myanmar
S: India (2) Mi-8T/Hip-C Helicopter (1999) 2000 (2) Second-hand; lease
(2) BN-2 Islander Light transport ac 2005 2006 2 Ex-Indian; aid; delivered despite UK warning delivery may affect UK arms sales to India; no. may be 4 incl 2 BN-2 MP version
(10) Light Gun 105mm Towed gun (2006) 2006 (10) Probably ex-Indian; aid for use against Indian Assamese rebels operating from Myanmar
(10) MPV APV (2006) 2006 (10) Designation uncertain; possibly ex-Indian; aid for use against Indian Assamese rebels operating from Myanmar; status uncertain
(10) T-55 Tank (2006) 2006 (10) Ex-Indian; aid for use against Indian Assamese rebels operating from Myanmar; status uncertain

Namibia
S: India 2 SA-315B Lama Light helicopter 1994 1994 2 Part of $5.5 m deal; Cheetah version
2 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 1994 1995 2 Part of $5.5 m deal; Chetak version
1 SA-315B Lama Light helicopter 2009 2011 1 SA-315 Cheetah version
2 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 2009 2012 (2) SA-316B Chetak version

Nepal
S: India (2) SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter (1974) 1974 (2) Aid; Chetak version
52 M-43 120mm Mortar (1992) 1992 (52) Probably ex-Indian; designation uncertain
2 SA-315B Lama Light helicopter 2001 2001 2 Possibly ex-Indian Cheetah version; aid against Maoist rebels
10 SA-315B Lama Light helicopter (2001) 2003-2004 (10) Lancer armed version; for police; for use against Maoist rebels
2 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 2001 2001 (2) Possibly ex-Indian; aid against Maoist rebels
(3) Casspir APC 2002 2002 (3) Ex-Indian; aid against Maoist rebels; no. could be up to 31
2 Druhv Helicopter (2003) 2004 2 $12-18 m deal (incl 70% as aid); armed version
100 MPV APV (2003) 2004 (100) Aid (Nepal pays 33% of costs)
1 Druhv Helicopter 2004 2005 (1) Aid; probably armed version
24 MPV APV (2009) 2011 24 Possibly ex-Indian; possibly aid; designation uncertain

Seychelles
S: India 2 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 1982 1982 2 Aid; Chetak version
1 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 1988 1988 1 Aid; Chetak version
1 SDB Mk-5 Patrol craft 2004 2005 1 Ex-Indian (but only 3 years old); Seychelles designation Topaz
2 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 2010 Aid against Somali pirates; Chetak version
(1) Do-228MP MP aircraft (2012) Aid against Somali pirates

Singapore
S: India 150 AMX-13/75 Light tank 1972 1973-1975 (150) Ex-Indian
(24) Centurion-3 Tank 1975 1975 (24) Ex-Indian; Centurion Mk 3/7 or Mk-5 version

South Africa
S: India 90 Centurion-3 Tank 1978 1978-1979 (90) Ex-Indian; armament removed before delivery; sold via private company; delivered via Spain and Jordan; for modernization in South Africa to Olifant

Sri Lanka
S: India (150) Tata Diesel Diesel engine (1985) 1987-2006 (150) For Unicorn and Unibuffel APC produced in Sri Lanka
1 Sukanya OPV 2000 2000 1 Ex-Indian; for use against LTTE rebels; plan for 1 more cancelled after Indian change in policy towards Sri Lanka-LTTE conflict; Sri Lankan designation Sayura
2 Indra Air search radar 2005 2006 2 Possibly ex-Indian; aid against LTTE rebels
2 Indra Air search radar 2007 2007 2 Aid
1 Vikram OPV 2007 2007 1 Ex-Indian; aid; Sri Lankan designation Sagara
1 Vikram OPV 2008 2008 1 Ex-Indian

Suriname
S: India 3 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter (2009) 2011 (3) $15-30 m deal (financed by Indian credit); Chetak version

Unknown country
S: India 2 Pipavav 100m OPV 2012 Recipient probably Nigeria; option on 2 more; delivery by 2015
 
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Small firearms are small value items. There are so many countries which are supplying india with small firearms. What a spectacle!

Probably the highest value weapons that you are able to sell overseas are some jv helicopters at several million USD each.

Most of the indian sales are spare parts which tend to be of relatively low values. I think SIPRI should open a category for ranking of sales of spare parts for weapons by countries. Many people will be interested in knowing how this segment of the arms import and export are going in the world.

The major delay in enabling our industry which creates stuff like LCA, Missiles, Tanks was hit by the sanctions and we had to do everything on our own, given teh fact that we started very late. and late because before that we didnt have a need to design and create things on our own because we had other major social issues to deal with and we had Russia who was giving us everything.

We didnt have funds, hence why we didnt have resource and platform.

However things will change now, we are pumping in money to R&D, we are failing and like CD said, we are trying. I am sure we will get there. The national policy that prevents private sector from entering full scale to defence manufacturing is like a mindset. That will take some time to change.

But dont be surprised if you see some radical transformation in coming year.
 
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India's entire defence exports since 1950

Transfers of major conventional weapons: sorted by recipient. Deals with deliveries or orders made for year range 1950 to 2012
Note: The &#8216;No. delivered/produced&#8217; and the &#8216;Year(s) of deliveries&#8217; columns refer to all deliveries since the beginning of the contract. Deals in which the recipient was involved in the production of the weapon system are listed separately. The &#8216;Comments&#8217; column includes publicly reported information on the value of the deal. Information on the sources and methods used in the collection of the data, and explanations of the conventions, abbreviations and acronyms, can be found at URL <http://www.sipri.org/contents/armstrad/at_data.html>. The SIPRI Arms Transfers Database is continuously updated as new information becomes available.
Source: SIPRI Arms Transfers Database
Information generated: 04 April 2013


Recipient/ Year Year(s) No.
supplier (S) No. Weapon Weapon of order/ of delivered/
or licenser (L) ordered designation description licence deliveries produced Comments


Bangladesh
S: India 4 DHC-3 Otter Light transport ac (1971) 1971 4 Ex-Indian; aid
(30) Model-56 105mm Towed gun 1971 1971 (30) Ex-Indian
1 DHC-4 Caribou Transport aircraft 1972 1972 1 Ex-Indian; aid
(3) SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter (1972) 1973 (3) Ex-Indian; no. could be 4
2 Ford Patrol craft (1973) 1973-1974 2 Ex-Indian; Bangladeshi designation Padma

Bhutan
S: India 1 Mi-4A/Hound-A Helicopter 1968 1968 1 Ex-Indian; aid
(1) MPV APV (2003) 2004 (1)

Ecuador
S: India 6 Druhv Helicopter 2008 2009 6 $50 m deal (incl 1 more for VIP transport); for SAR

Ghana
S: India 12 HT-2 Trainer aircraft 1958 1959 12

Guinea Bissau
S: India 1 SDB Mk-3 Patrol craft (1992) 1993 1 Ex-Indian

Maldives
S: India (2) BRDM-2 Reconnaissance AV (1991) 1992 2 Ex-Indian; designation uncertain
(2) Ferret APV (1991) 1992 2 Ex-Indian; designation uncertain
1 SDB Mk-5 Patrol craft 2006 2006 1 Ex-Indian (but only 4 years old); Maldive designation Hurawee
1 Druhv Helicopter 2009 2010 1 Aid

Mauritius
S: India 1 Ford Patrol craft (1974) 1974 1 Ex-Indian; for coast guard
1 Do-228MP MP aircraft 1989 1990 1 Aid; for coast guard
1 SDB Mk-2 Patrol craft 1993 1993 1 Ex-Indian; $3.5 m deal; for coast guard
1 Do-228MP MP aircraft (2004) 2004 1 For coast guard

Myanmar
S: India (2) Mi-8T/Hip-C Helicopter (1999) 2000 (2) Second-hand; lease
(2) BN-2 Islander Light transport ac 2005 2006 2 Ex-Indian; aid; delivered despite UK warning delivery may affect UK arms sales to India; no. may be 4 incl 2 BN-2 MP version
(10) Light Gun 105mm Towed gun (2006) 2006 (10) Probably ex-Indian; aid for use against Indian Assamese rebels operating from Myanmar
(10) MPV APV (2006) 2006 (10) Designation uncertain; possibly ex-Indian; aid for use against Indian Assamese rebels operating from Myanmar; status uncertain
(10) T-55 Tank (2006) 2006 (10) Ex-Indian; aid for use against Indian Assamese rebels operating from Myanmar; status uncertain

Namibia
S: India 2 SA-315B Lama Light helicopter 1994 1994 2 Part of $5.5 m deal; Cheetah version
2 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 1994 1995 2 Part of $5.5 m deal; Chetak version
1 SA-315B Lama Light helicopter 2009 2011 1 SA-315 Cheetah version
2 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 2009 2012 (2) SA-316B Chetak version

Nepal
S: India (2) SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter (1974) 1974 (2) Aid; Chetak version
52 M-43 120mm Mortar (1992) 1992 (52) Probably ex-Indian; designation uncertain
2 SA-315B Lama Light helicopter 2001 2001 2 Possibly ex-Indian Cheetah version; aid against Maoist rebels
10 SA-315B Lama Light helicopter (2001) 2003-2004 (10) Lancer armed version; for police; for use against Maoist rebels
2 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 2001 2001 (2) Possibly ex-Indian; aid against Maoist rebels
(3) Casspir APC 2002 2002 (3) Ex-Indian; aid against Maoist rebels; no. could be up to 31
2 Druhv Helicopter (2003) 2004 2 $12-18 m deal (incl 70% as aid); armed version
100 MPV APV (2003) 2004 (100) Aid (Nepal pays 33% of costs)
1 Druhv Helicopter 2004 2005 (1) Aid; probably armed version
24 MPV APV (2009) 2011 24 Possibly ex-Indian; possibly aid; designation uncertain

Seychelles
S: India 2 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 1982 1982 2 Aid; Chetak version
1 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 1988 1988 1 Aid; Chetak version
1 SDB Mk-5 Patrol craft 2004 2005 1 Ex-Indian (but only 3 years old); Seychelles designation Topaz
2 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter 2010 Aid against Somali pirates; Chetak version
(1) Do-228MP MP aircraft (2012) Aid against Somali pirates

Singapore
S: India 150 AMX-13/75 Light tank 1972 1973-1975 (150) Ex-Indian
(24) Centurion-3 Tank 1975 1975 (24) Ex-Indian; Centurion Mk 3/7 or Mk-5 version

South Africa
S: India 90 Centurion-3 Tank 1978 1978-1979 (90) Ex-Indian; armament removed before delivery; sold via private company; delivered via Spain and Jordan; for modernization in South Africa to Olifant

Sri Lanka
S: India (150) Tata Diesel Diesel engine (1985) 1987-2006 (150) For Unicorn and Unibuffel APC produced in Sri Lanka
1 Sukanya OPV 2000 2000 1 Ex-Indian; for use against LTTE rebels; plan for 1 more cancelled after Indian change in policy towards Sri Lanka-LTTE conflict; Sri Lankan designation Sayura
2 Indra Air search radar 2005 2006 2 Possibly ex-Indian; aid against LTTE rebels
2 Indra Air search radar 2007 2007 2 Aid
1 Vikram OPV 2007 2007 1 Ex-Indian; aid; Sri Lankan designation Sagara
1 Vikram OPV 2008 2008 1 Ex-Indian

Suriname
S: India 3 SA-316B Alouette-3 Light helicopter (2009) 2011 (3) $15-30 m deal (financed by Indian credit); Chetak version

Unknown country
S: India 2 Pipavav 100m OPV 2012 Recipient probably Nigeria; option on 2 more; delivery by 2015

The Sipri report above confirms my post @# 62. Most of the big ticket sales in are helicopters. indian were able to sell more light helicopters before 2010. Not too many of chopper were sold in 2011, 2012.

Wow, that means india has sold a lot of small arms and spare parts to reach the $1.45 ~ 2 billion
marks

The major delay in enabling our industry which creates stuff like LCA, Missiles, Tanks was hit by the sanctions and we had to do everything on our own, given teh fact that we started very late. and late because before that we didnt have a need to design and create things on our own because we had other major social issues to deal with and we had Russia who was giving us everything.

We didnt have funds, hence why we didnt have resource and platform.

However things will change now, we are pumping in money to R&D, we are failing and like CD said, we are trying. I am sure we will get there. The national policy that prevents private sector from entering full scale to defence manufacturing is like a mindset. That will take some time to change.

But dont be surprised if you see some radical transformation in coming year.

Well from the analysis above, your country has sold a lot of spare parts and small military items.
let's see how india can change the landscape of high value weapon exports with the transformations.
 
.
The Sipri report above confirms my post @# 62. Most of the big ticket sales in are helicopters. indian were able to sell more light helicopters before 2010. Not too many of chopper were sold in 2011, 2012.

Wow, that means india has sold a lot of small arms and spare parts to reach the $1.45 ~ 2 billion
marks



Well from the analysis above, your country has sold a lot of spare parts and small military items.
let's see how india can change the landscape of high value weapon exports with the transformations.

High value weapons like missile systems and other parts will be tough to export considering Indian government agencies can barely keep up the pace of the requirement for the armed forces. Unless there is a large expansion and agreement of sharing the work load or manufacturing with the Private industries like TATA and other companies, I don't see much of the export going up.
 
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