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India's growing Defence exports
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Asad Mirza (Source: IANS) | 10 Oct, 2022
India's defence exports to various countries have increased manifold in
recent years, the latest deal is to export Indian rocket launchers to
Armenia.
According to reports, India would supply the
'Pinaka' multi-rocket launcher system, which can fire a salvo of 12 HE
rockets in 44 seconds to Armenia besides anti-tank missiles and a
variety of ammunition as part of a package agreement.
The
complete details of these armaments have not yet been disclosed. Pinaka
saw service during the Kargil War, where it was successful in
neutralising enemy positions on the mountaintops.
While the
deal's value has not been disclosed, the report claims armament worth
$250 million or Rs 2,000 crore would be sold over the next few months.
The deal was signed earlier this month and supplies are to be
fast-tracked.
It is not the first time that Armenia has received weapons equipment from India.
In
2020, India triumphed over Russia and Poland in a $40 million defence
agreement with Armenia providing it with four indigenous 'Swathi'
counter-battery radars.
This disclosure comes days after India
called on the "aggressor side" in fresh fighting along the
Armenia-Azerbaijan border to "immediately cease hostilities" without
directly naming Azerbaijan. Latest fighting erupted between the two
sides on September 13.
India's defence exports
Meanwhile,
it seems the Armenian-Azerbaijan conflict has helped India to boost its
arms exports. According to reports, India recently announced figures for
the highest-ever defence export growth that swelled by a staggering 334
per cent over the last five years.
In fact, India is chasing an even higher target.
In
2020, the Narendra Modi government had set a target of Rs 35,000 crore
($5 billion) export in aerospace, and defence goods and services in the
next five years. This is part of the turnover of Rs 1.75 lakh crore ($25
billion) in defence manufacturing by 2025 that the government is aiming
to achieve.
India's defence exports touched a record Rs 13,000 crore in 2021-22, "eight times" of what it was around five years ago.
Besides
the strategic importance of the deal with Armenia, the export order is a
boost for the indigenous defence industry with the Indian government
keen to increase the value of Indian arms exports.
India had also signed a contract with the Philippines in January 2022 for the sale of BrahMos missiles.
Currently,
India exports defence equipment to 75 countries and these include
weapon simulators, tear gas launcher, torpedo loading mechanism, alarm
monitoring & control, night vision monocular & binocular,
light-weight torpedo & fire control systems, armoured protection
vehicle, weapons locating radar, high-frequency radio, coastal
surveillance radar among others.
Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict
The
issue of the conclave of Nagorno-Karabakh has always been the bone of
contention between Armenia and Azerbaijan ever since the two countries
became independent republics, after gaining independence from the
erstwhile USSR.
The disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh lies in Azerbaijan and is inhabited mostly by ethnic Armenians.
The
conflict escalated into a full-scale war in the early 1990s which later
transformed into alow-intensity conflict until four-day escalation in
April 2016 and then into another full-scale war in 2020.
A
ceasefire signed in 1994 in Bishkek was followed by two decades of
relative stability, which significantly deteriorated along with
Azerbaijan's increasing frustration with the status quo, at odds with
Armenia's efforts to cement it.
Azerbaijan, for one, has received
backing from its traditional allies and supporters, Turkey and Israel.
During the 2020 skirmish between the two combatants, Baku turned the
tide in its favour by overwhelmingly deploying Turkish Bayraktar and
Israeli kamikaze drones.
While Armenia has often turned to Russia
for support, Moscow's preoccupation with the on-going war against
Ukraine has resulted in not a very supportive response, this time.
In
the face of rising hostilities and little military aid, the defence
deal with India may prove to be a shot in the arm for a beleaguered
Armenia.
Azerbaijan-Turkey-Pakistan relationship
India's
military assistance for Armenia comes against the backdrop of its
regional rival's bonhomie with Azerbaijan. Pakistan has consistently
backed Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and has refused to
establish diplomatic ties and legally recognise Armenia as an
independent state.
Azerbaijan is seen by many as part of an
emerging axis with Turkey and Pakistan. It has used Turkish drones to
fight war against Armenia, and is also in talks with Pakistan to buy the
JF-17 fighter aircraft.
In 2017, Turkey, Azerbaijan, and
Pakistan had signed a Trilateral Ministers Agreement that established
security cooperation, and built upon previous bilateral military aid
arrangements.
These three countries also conducted a joint exercise named 'Three Brothers' last year.
The rise of Azerbaijan with increased Turkey-Pakistan military cooperation is a direct warning to India.
Azerbaijan
has acquired many deadly weapons by increasing friendship with Turkey
and Pakistan in the name of Islam. Indian fears that other countries may
also go along this route in the name of Islamic countries are not
unfounded.
However, in spite of these developments, an
interesting fact is that India has stronger economic ties with
Azerbaijan than with Armenia. Indian company ONGC has also invested
heavily in Azerbaijan's gas sector.
The Indian bilateral trade with Azerbaijan in 2019 stood at $1,093 million, while with Armenia it was only $48 million in 2020.
Broadly
this latest defence deal will place India as one of the emerging global
powers with rising defence exports capability. In addition it will also
allow it to play a significant role in the central Asian republics and
regionally, both.
(Asad Mirza is a political commentator based in
New Delhi. He writes on Indian Muslims, educational, international
affairs, interfaith and current affairs)
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