Viraat to be back in action in a week (ex Hermes)
Viraat to be back in action in a week
NEW DELHI: The mother will be back in action soon. With power
projection being the name of the game, India is
finally ready to once again
deploy its solitary aircraft carrier INS Viraat on the high seas after
an almost two-year gap.
INS Viraat is now on the verge of completing its sea-acceptance trials
and work-up phase off Mumbai after an 18-month-long comprehensive
refit in Mumbai and Kochi to increase its longevity as well as upgrade
its weapon and sensor packages.
Coincidentally enough, the 28,000-tonne old warhorse will also be
completing its 50th year as an operational warship this November.
Originally commissioned in the British Royal Navy as HMS Hermes in
November 1959, it was inducted into the Indian Navy in May 1987.
Even British officers, who have served on her, are stunned we have
managed to prolong its operational life so much. After this refit, it
will serve us for at least five years more. It should be full-ops in a
week or so, said a senior officer.
While Navy is justifiably proud of getting INS Viraat back in action,
its a telling comment on the Indian defence establishments utter lack
of long-term strategic planning to build military capabilities in tune
with the countrys geopolitical objectives. An aircraft carrier prowling
on the high seas, with its accompanying fighter jets tearing into the
skies from the mobile airstrip, after all, projects power like nothing else.
US, on its part, has 11 carrier strike groups deployed across the globe
to rule the seas. China, in turn, is actively scrambling to get carriers
of its own in keeping with its big superpower aspirations. Successive
Indian governments, however, been quite apathetic to Navys quest to
have three aircraft carriers one each for the eastern and western
seaboards, while the third undergoes repairs to protect the countrys
primary area of geopolitical interest stretching from Hormuz Strait to
Malacca Strait.
The long-delayed 40,000-tonne indigenous aircraft carrier (IAC) being
built at Cochin Shipyard, for one, will be ready only by 2015. For
another, India will get the refurbished 44,570-tonne Admiral Gorshkov,
undergoing a refit at the Sevmash Shipyard in North Russia, only by
early-2013 now. India and Russia, of course, are still bitterly
negotiating Gorshkovs final refit cost, with the price likely to settle
upwards of $ 2.5-billion. There is another big worry for Navy. INS
Viraat may be all set to resume duties but its left with only 11 Sea
Harrier jump-jets to operate from its deck.
From 1983 onwards, Navy had inducted 30 of the British-origin Sea
Harriers, which take off from the angled ski-jump on INS Viraat and land
vertically on its deck, but has lost over half of them in accidents. Be
that as it may, the 13-storey high INS Viraat will soldier on with its
motto of Jalamev Yasya, Balamev Tasya (he who controls the sea is all
powerful) for the foreseeable future.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Viraat-to-be-back-in-action-in-a-week/articleshow/5184876.cms
date: Sat, 31 Oct 2009 20:35:54 +0000
author: Herbie lid
|