As India has put tremendous effort into modernizing its armed forces, so the United States, Russia and the European Union have sought to be the principal providers of advanced military equipment. With a growing defense budget, India is being wooed like never before.
India’s defensive needs stretch from the strategic to the conventional. With assertive nuclear armed neighbors and stateless actors propped up covertly under myriad nomenclatures, India faces a daunting task in clearly prioritizing its security requirements for the coming decade.
The task is made even more formidable as each nation selling military goods has its own tactical and technological solutions. India therefore needs to import arms from nations who are principled enough to provide support and sustenance through thick and thin. Ultimately, Indian military planners must feel safe in the knowledge that whoever they procure military equipment from can be counted on for future supplies as well as continued support.
The political and military leadership of India is working to ensure a purchase policy of continued supplies during the lifetime of imported equipment and the transfer of technology for indigenous production. The ongoing process over finalizing the contract for India’s Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft is a good example.
Many other nations have looked overseas to upgrade their armed forces, with mixed results. China has imported arms from Russia since the 1950’s – since the end of the Cold War, Russia has provided China with a tremendous array of military equipment, including advanced naval surface units, 4th generation fighter aircraft and diesel submarines.
But over the past few years this relationship has begun to sour. Russia has complained bitterly about Chinese efforts to reproduce Russian military equipment, which it has then attempted to sell to others. There has been an ongoing debate whether such moves by the Chinese were implied as being OK by Russia, or a major misunderstanding. Regardless, Russia has since halted most new sales of military goods over such issues. China, for its part, has now crafted efforts to develop its own research and development capabilities with ongoing efforts to boost its home grown military technology.
Japan, meanwhile, has crafted a strategy of utilizing U.S. arms purchases as well as building up its own indigenous capabilities. The modernization of its air force is continuing with American support, and will likely continue for the coming decades. Japan faces a rising and increasingly aggressive China in the Sea of Japan and in the East Sea. This, coupled by maneuvers by PLAN ships in its home waters, has prompted a review of Japan’s defensive needs. The centerpiece of Japan’s defensive strategy is knowing it has a steady stream of U.S. military equipment and technology at its disposal.
Against this backdrop, all of the world’s major arms suppliers have witnessed the birth of unmanned drones and radical advances in war fighting. Man- machine interfaces over extended ranges that utilize innovative technology have made it redundant to deploy large armies in troubled parts of the world. Highly capable drones fitted with “eyes and ears” across all spectrums are now relentlessly pursuing hostile, non-state actors day and night. The advanced versions of these machines can now stay aloft for four days. India has the capacity to acquire such equipment from various vendors, but it must ensure such transfers won’t at some point be halted.
While India has an obligation to further modernize its armed forces and acquire various forms of military technology, it must cast a cautious eye over its options. For a start, New Delhi must ensure that whoever provides advanced technologies will likely remain a long-term partner. With the various military challenges India faces from state and non-state actors along multiple sections of its long boarders, India must not be placed in a situation where quickly changing geopolitical fortunes deny it military assets sought in good faith.
Second, and just as importantly, India must work honestly with partners to develop India’s own indigenous arms capabilities through ethical, mutually beneficial and agreed upon technology transfers. As long as all parties are on the same page, with realistic expectations and shared agendas, everyone should be well-served.








Bharateeya
Yet another India-centric article with nothing new to offer…
Valbonne
India, just like Japan are able to procure the latest military equipment from the West. Eventually India will have an advantage over China. India will definitely be a very strong military power in Asia. China is not able to do what India can do, so, I believe China will be much weaken in the future, because Chinese military technologies are twenty to thirty years behind.
Aryan
Yeah the article is India Centric but to Mr. Valbonne what exactly india is able to do what chinese cant??? please explain
Soul Speek
Wise men say: “Never under-estimate your enemies”
John Chan
India should get best military technologies wherever they are available. Such wide sourcing provides two fundamental benefits:
1. India always has best military technologies in the world and can maintain bellicose dominance in Asia.
2. No single supplier nation can black mail India, then India becomes true superpower, and it can even lecture its former colonial master as well as current world bully.
a_canadian_observer
@Valbone: I disagree. India doesn’t have a military/weapon program like china. Although china has downplayed its program, it’s still considered huge and will surpass the U.S. in the very near future, despite the fact that they have “borrowed”/stolen technologies from others, especially from the Russian.
yang zi
vietnam-observer, Your knoweloge about China’s defense industry is good. China could surpass Russia in a decade in defense technology, not US. it takes much longer and I even doubt it will ever be or need to be.
India is making good leverage out of Russia, the BrahMos missile is top tier. if it can develop into a hypersonic cruise missile with a long range, it is very deadly.
In the hypersonic engine field, Russia and US are leading. Russia may be more advanced than US. China has been working on scramjet technology since 1990s, so far nothing comes out.
I think navy is becoming obselete and less important. just like tanks. the fastest navy ship runs 40 miles per hour, it is a snail compared to jets and long range weapons. it is not safe for ships sailing around hostile shores.
you will see hypersonic and scramjet going to mainstream media in a few years.
a_canadian_observer
@yangzi: Not sure if I can fully agree with you. china may come out with the scramjet in the near future, and may surpass the US. I just hope those of us in the “Westpac” (US included) pay special attention to this, to avoid any regret later.
yang zi
@vietnam-observer, remember, you are a lackey, not in the pac.
a_canadian_observer
@yangzi: Is that the best you can throw at me, you low-class, even with your 5000+ years of history? I’m disappointed! Sigh!
John Chan
@a_canadian_observer,
Discouraging Indian national aspiration of high tech military and superpower status, then without suggesting meaningful replacement is destructive and unfriendly.
If India does not acquire best military technologies wherever available, shall India let its military might decline and subject harassments from its surrounding nations? Putting India in such disadvantageous position is hostile.
India should never fall into the honey word traps set up by the US and its allies. “Buy babe buy” is the way to maintain India’s pride.
sandeep.c
upgrading its military infrastructure is essential to attract investment in a geopolitically hostile & volatile region.which will intern help india to lift its people from the vicious cycle of poverty & provide them with peace & security.hopefully this will also puts india in a position ver it can bcome a solution to the problems in the subcontinent rather then being part of it.
brameen
Really… An article about India’s military challenges that only barely mentions India — and like the man above said offers nothing new.
Yang zi
India has done well. China has provided perfect cover for Indian buildup. As long as China is CCP controlled and militarily stronger, India will always have the oppurtunity to arm.
The world is big enough for both India and China to grow. But China need to watch for Indian or Hindu nationalist.
I kind of like what Obama did in public, criticize China. Not his argument, but the public show of discontent. Chinese leaders are living in a cocoon weaves by their underlings, they need to wake up and face the reality. The air pollution monitoring is a good example, US embassy uses a much better way to monitor the air, Beijing keep saying air is good, but people keep breathing the dirty air, this shakes CCP’s credibility, forcing it make changes to its monitoring method.
Hu is a weak leader, his do nothing approach can only work in a benign environment, but China’s environment is not benign at all.
Liang1a
China’s GDP is bigger than India’s by 4 times at $7 trillion to India’s $1.8 trillion. But since China can make all its weapons and India must import them, the real difference is $12 trillion for China in PPP values of 4 yuan per dollar to $1.8 trillion for India in nominal value or almost 7 times. And some would argue that China’s PPP GDP is even higher at the exchange rate of 3 yuan per dollar. So the difference between China’s economic power and India’s economic power is closer to 9 times. This means that for each Su-30 India can deploy, China can deploy 10 J-11B (China can produce J-11B at lower prices than Su-30) which is closer to the performance of Su-35. China has developed J-20 which is superior to Russia’s T-50. Therefore, for each T-50 India might buy from Russia, China can deploy 10 J-20. In the end, India has no chance of beating China or even to ruffle China’s heathers. India will simply squander its own scarce economic resources and keep its own people poor. And China will simply draw ahead and become the sole ultra-superpower while India sinks back down into the poorest country in the world.
Girish
“China has developed J-20 which is superior to Russia’s T-50″
Is that as per CCP press report?
Liang1a
People think a country can just spend whatever it wants on military. Obviously the US has found out the hard way that it can’t. And India will soon find out the same thing.
China on the other hand needs to reduce its exports and use its resources more effectively to expand the domestic economy while expanding the military. Relying on your enemies not to attack you is suicidal in the end. And the more assertive China becomes the more friends it will have as more nations look to China for justice and protection. In the end, China can do more foreign trade if it becomes very strong because its prospective trading partner cannot be intimidated by China’s enemies to stop trading with it.
Praveen Reddy
@ Liang1a
More Nations Look to CHina for Justice and Protection??? what are those countries Terrorist Pakistan???
Any way funny point of view… And thats all CCP wants from u people…
John Chan
@Praveen Reddy,
Liang1a’s funny point of view is called Realpolitik.
Liang1a
Girish
November 17, 2011 at 5:02 am
“China has developed J-20 which is superior to Russia’s T-50″
Is that as per CCP press report?
==============================================
China’s Achilles heel is its jet engines. But apparently this gap has been narrowed if not totally bridged by the development of the WS-15 series of 160 kN thrust with thrust vectoring.
http://wuxinghongqi.blogspot.com/2011/06/being-equipped-j-20-ws-15-engine.html
China’s avionics and radars are superior to the T-50. Therefore, the J-20 is superior to the T-50. This is why China turned down Russia’s offer for joint development of T-50.
Also go to the following link for comparison between J-20 and F-22. Please read the quote at the bottom and pay special attention to the part where it said:
“In fact, the Russian T-50 is, by all measures… inferior.”
Please note that this author is apparently an American by the name of Jeffery Lundblad. So, to answer your direct question, “Is that as per CCP press report?” The answer is a resounding, “NO!” The fact of J-20’s superiority is univsersally recognized. Only Indians deny this!
http://www.politikalmatters.com/2011/02/j-20-vs-f-22-direct-comparison-of.html
Range and Armaments: J-20 Wins
Speed: Toss up
Maneuverability: J-20 Wins
Radar: F-22 Wins (decision subjective)
Cockpit Design: J-20 wins.
Infrared Stealth: F-22 Wins (decision subjective)
Radar Stealth: uncertain
“At this point it is impossible to make a full comparison between these two machines as much is not yet known. But it is clear that China is establishing itself as a innovation superpower. While the US has always led the aerospace industry (and still does) the Russians always trailed behind in second place. China, for decades, simply copied older Russian designs, attempting to stay competitive. The J-20 has changed the aerospace landscape, it is neither a copy nor does it trail the Russians. In fact, the Russian T-50 is, by all measures… inferior. China has vaulted ahead of Russia in aerospace prowess (why else do you think the Chinese media is so keen to show off their latest creation?) The J-20 is a worthy competitor to the F-22, perhaps equaling it in performance, quite an amazing feat by a country that a decade ago was still copying Mig 21s.”
a_canadian_observer
I think Liang1a is right. American machines are no match for these chinese made ones.