May 13,2008:
Senior members of the Indian
Defense Ministry (including the minister himself) are pushing for mass
production of the Indian designed Arjun battle tank. Several dozen Arjun's
entered limited service in 2002, after over two decades of development. The
Arjun still had serious performance and reliability problems. Two years ago,
India decided to relegate the Arjun to training duties, rather than put it into mass production. The 35 Arjuns
already built proved too unreliable for
combat. But for training purposes, they were adequate.
The government was reluctant to give up on the
Arjun, as so many politicians had praised the project as a military and
nationalistic success. But every time a prototype was put to the test, the results
were disappointing. As so often happened with other weapons projects, the Arjun
is having problems with its electronics. In the last round of tests, it was the
fire control system. But Arjun has also had problems with its engine, and that
fact that its size and weight prevents it from being used with current tank
transporters. The Defense Ministry could not bring itself to admit defeat, so
all attempts to just cancel Arjun failed. Until now.
Eight years ago, the situation became
critical, because the army needed a new generation of tanks and the Arjun
wasn't ready. So the army ordered 310
T-90 tanks from Russia, mainly to check them out. This was the beginning of the
end for Arjun, that was supposed to be the successor to the Russian T-72, long
the first line Indian tank. The Defense Ministry still insisted that Arjun
production would go forward. But the government engineers could not make Arjun
work. There were also problems with using manufacturing technology, imported
from Russia, to build components for Indian made T-72s, to build similar
components for Arjun. About two thirds of the components in the Arjun and T-72
were interchangeable. But the technology transfer agreements with Russia only
allowed India to manufacture these components for T-72s, not another tank
design. The lawyers screwed up on this one, and Indian manufacturers were not
able to design and build replacement parts that India could afford. The Arjun
was going to cost more than imported T-90s.
Six years ago, desperate Ministry of Defense
officials made plans to mount the turrets from the Arjuns on T-72 chassis, overcoming many of the
construction problems. The Arjun chassis would then be used for a new Bhim
self-propelled 155mm howitzers, with the South African Denel T-6 turret. The
T-72 with the Arjun turret would be called Tank EX. The Denel turret proved to
be too expensive, and too many components in the Arjun turret were still having
problems, so this scheme was abandoned as well. At that point, the army began
to refurbish some of its 1,700 T-72s, equipping 200 of them with additional
armor (ERA), a new engine and upgraded electronics. The army began to look on
the T-90 as its next generation tank, but it took four years for the Defense
Ministry, and politicians, to admit that Arjun would not work.
Many of the problems with Arjun had to do with
nothing more than government ineptitude. The Ministry of Defense was more
interested in putting out press releases, about how India was becoming
self-sufficient in tanks, than in attending to the technical details needed to
make this happen. The Ministry of Defense crowd has done this sort of thing
many times. Moreover, if it isn't incompetence screwing things up, then it's
corruption. Cleaning up the Ministry of Defense, and all the politicians that
get involved with it, is, so far, a problem without a solution.
In the
last two years, India has adopted the Russian T-90 as their new tank. But work
continued on the Arjun, and another 124 were ordered. Recent problems with
Russian suppliers, and growing confidence among military equipment
manufacturers, has given government ministers an opportunity to once more tout
the Arjun as a shining example of Indian accomplishment in the defense sector.