People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
33 August 16, 200 |
Indian Nuclear Submarine
Raghu
THE
long-held ambition of India�s strategic and political establishment to
join the
big boys in the global power stakes got a major fillip on July 26, 2009
when
the country formally unveiled and launched its first nuclear-powered
and
nuclear weapons capable submarine.
The
INS Arihant (�destroyer of enemies�
in one rendering of the Sanskrit translation) leapfrogs
THE
ARIHANT
The
Arihant is a 6,000-tonne vessel, 110
metres long and 11 metres across, powered by an 85 MW pressurised water
reactor
(PWR) fuelled by 40 per cent enriched
uranium of Indian origin. With a crew strength of 75, it has a
submerged speed
of 30 knots and surface speed of 10 knots. It can stay underwater for
theoretically
unlimited periods, restricted only by food supply, since a nuclear sub
does not
need to surface periodically to �breathe� in fresh air and evacuate
noxious
carbon dioxide from diesel engines.
The
Arihant is equipped to carry
submarine-launched ballistic nuclear missiles (SLBM), at this stage
believed to
be DRDO�s K-15 Sagarika-series missile with a range of 700 km, besides
an
assortment of conventional anti-ship missiles and torpedoes.
The
Arihant will of course not be
actively deployed for a few years yet. Its first major challenge will
be its
nuclear reactor achieving criticality, followed by harbour and then sea
trials,
and finally thorough testing of the full range of its weaponised
capabilities.
By that time, work on another two similar submarines now being built
would have
been completed. Whereas three subs are the minimum required to ensure
that at
least one is actively deployed, it is likely that a further two or
three may
also be built. These subs are to constitute the third leg of the famed
triad of
nuclear weapons delivery systems from surface, air and undersea. The
undersea
capability would complement India�s land-based nuclear missiles of the
Agni
series, and its fleet of jury-rigged --- that is, the aircraft do not
come with
this capability but are subsequently modified for it --- Mirage 2000
and Su-30
MkI aircraft.
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
The idea of
The
early years were devoted to developing the nuclear reactor rather than
the
submarine, the main tasks being to miniaturise the reactor to fit a
small space
and handling the concentrated weight of the reactor and its containment
vessel,
together about one-tenth the submarine weight, in one small part of the
vessel.
The tortuous saga of disagreements about reactor design between BARC
and the
Navy, and later the arrest of the Navy scientist on espionage charges
subsequently dismissed by the courts, is a sorry story symptomatic of
the high
drama and internecine bickering that flourished in the atmosphere of
secrecy,
whimsical decision-making and poor accountability that have
characterised the
ATV and so many other defence projects. (See �Betrayal of the Defence
Forces�,
2001, by Admiral Vishnu Bhagwat whose abrupt dismissal by the NDA
government
was also at least partly triggered by his �revelation� of the ATV
project, even
though it had been formally outed as early as 1994 by former chairman
of the
Atomic Energy Commission M R Srinivasan, whose newspaper article is
also
appended in Adm. Bhagwat�s book!)
As
for the submarine,
So
while SSBN capability has been acquired � available but hopefully never
to be
used � technologies and capabilities for design and manufacture of
nuclear-powered attack submarines that are of greater day-to-day
operational
relevance, have not yet been developed.
There are apparently no plans to pursue this dimension of the
programme
as originally conceived, especially in view of the impending
acquisition of
French Scorpene submarines and leasing-in of Akula-class SSNs from
Finally,
the missile for use with the SSBN has been as shrouded in mystery as
the ATV
project. Notwithstanding the prolonged speculation in the international
strategic community, it now appears clear that the K-15 missile is a
ballistic
not a cruise missile from within the Sagarika series of missiles.
Trials of the
K-15 have had middling success so far, with the implication that
several steps
remain before the missile is fully developed and can be integrated into
the Arihant and other SSBNs.
Numerous
defence establishments, public and private sector companies, and
academic
institutions have played major roles, by themselves or in collaboration
with
international partners in a manner such that important capabilities and
know-how have been acquired in
Special
steels used in construction of the hull have been developed at the
Mishra Dhatu
Nigam Ltd in
CONNECTION
In
this entire process, the ATV Project owes a great deal to assistance
from the
erstwhile Soviet Union and
The
nuclear submarine project in the real sense took off only after the
lease of a
Soviet SSN to the Indian Navy in 1988, following a long process of
inspections
by Indian teams, construction of a special training facility near
STRATEGIC
SIGNIFICANCE
The Arihant will be entering service during a
period of
substantial expansion and modernisation by the Indian Navy, for long
the
neglected arm of the Indian defence forces. While the notorious
problems of
enormous delays bedeviling defence acquisitions have meant that several
past
decisions are yet to translate into reality, causing serious security
gaps, the
Indian Navy will be visibly strengthened during the next decade, with
about 160
fighting vessels and 400 aircraft. Apart from several battleships and
three
aircraft carriers, the Navy is also acquiring additional submarines not
just to
beef up the fleet but actually to replace badly depleted submarine
strength due
to ageing and degradation. Apart from the two Akula class SSNs on
10-year lease
from
The
Arihant and its sister SSBNs are
expected to find their place within this naval force.
Even
within this framework, there are several questions surrounding the
capability
of the Arihant and sister SSBNs now
being built or planned. The 700 km range of the K-15 missile or the
1000 km
being spoken for an updated version means that the SSBN must get pretty
close
to its target landmass, increasing the risk of detection. Even the 2500
km
range of the SLBM version of the Agni-III currently being developed or
the
extended range of 3500 km of the K-5 pale in comparison with the 5,000
� 12,000
km range of missiles on comparable SSBMs operated by the US, Russia, UK
or
China which operates three SSBN and 6 SSNs in a fleet of 62 submarines.
The
reactor too is quite small at under 90 MW while comparable SSN/SSBNs in
other
countries not only have more power but also have lifetime fuel supply
of over
30 years whereas the BARC reactor has only 10 years� supply of nuclear
fuel,
with refueling entailing major costly and time-consuming work.
The
military significance of the Arihant
therefore should not be over-rated
especially in the contemporary global and regional security
environment.
It should be seen, rather, as a demonstrator of the potential strengths
and
depth of the Indian scientific-technical and industrial capability. It
would be
better for
One
must also not miss the irony that India is taking these steps towards a
nuclear
triad which can only expand in the years to come when major powers such
as the
US and Russia are scaling down their nuclear arsenals, when a US
president has
spoken for the first time in over five decades about universal nuclear
disarmament. Those who think India has entered a new power zone after
it went
overtly nuclear may feel this is an odd time, just when India has
gate-crashed
into the big league, to be speaking about disarmament or a non-nuclear
security
policy. But then there was a time when