If there is a single lesson that India must learn from the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, it is the need to deliberately diversify the sources from which we procure our defence equipment. At its core, the prime minister’s Aatmanirbhar Bharat (self-sufficient India) campaign aims to rely on nobody but ourselves for the weapons and equipment needed to fight and win a war. However, since full self-sufficiency would take years to achieve, a clear intermediate goal is essential: To ensure that we are not unhealthily dependent on a single country, strategic grouping, or company for our defence equipment. Our reliance on Russia goes back decades and relates not just to basic combat equipment such as rifles, tanks, infantry combat vehicles, and air defence guns, but also increasingly for “sub-strategic” systems that incorporate closely guarded technologies. For example, India has taken from Russia two nuclear-propelled attack submarines (SSN) on successive 10-year leases. Russia has assisted Indian designers in preparing blueprints for India’s indigenous, nuclear-propelled ballistic missile submarines (SSBN). That is something that even the US refused to help New Delhi with, even though Washington makes much of India being America’s “major defence partner”. Moscow’s design assistance has also gone into building the aircraft carrier INS Vikrant. Indian satellite navigation system, called GAGAN, benefits from access to the precision code of Russia’s Global Navigation Satellite System (GLONASS). The two countries have jointly developed the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile, which has become a symbol of Indo-Russian cooperation.
However, New Delhi’s defence relations with Russia and Ukraine have led to a peculiar triangle of mutual dependency. When the Indian Air Force (IAF) wanted to get a mid-life upgrade for its Antonov-32 (AN-32) transport aircraft fleet, it had to arrange this with both Ukraine and Russia. That is because Antonov is located in Ukraine, but many of the parts of the AN-32 were made in Russian factories spread across the erstwhile Soviet Union. Eventually, Kyiv had to set up new manufacturing units for AN-32 parts in order to complete the job. In another example involving Ukraine, the Indian Navy recently bought four Krivak-III class frigates from Russia but since they are propelled by Ukrainian Zorya turbines, the deal is being delayed by Kyiv’s refusal to supply the turbines to Russia. India realises the undesirability of this heavy dependency on Moscow, but can neither sustain the relations in their present form, nor extricate India’s military from them. Given Moscow’s dependence on India’s purchase of Russian arms, it cannot be persuaded to withdraw from lucrative Indian tenders such as those for 114 multi-role combat aircraft (MRCA) or for 57 carrier-based aircraft for the Indian Navy.
Given the sensitivity that characterises India’s growing defence ties with Washington and deteriorating ties with Beijing, any reluctance to buy Russian weaponry risks making India appear like a western ally. Furthermore, given Russia’s growing closeness to China, strong Moscow-New Delhi ties give Russia the strength to keep China at arm’s length. Russia’s State Armament Programme requires the development of a whole new generation of weapons systems and technologies that Moscow cannot fund on its own. Moscow would prefer India over China as a co-development partner, given the latter’s worrying record of reverse engineering. Furthermore, India’s vast military requirements, combined with Russia’s own modernisation drive, provide the economies of scale needed for both militaries to obtain high-tech, low-cost systems. The India-Russia defence relations, therefore, need to be managed carefully.
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