The defence ministrys decision,taken at the meeting of the Defence Acquisition Council DAC earlier this month,to allow the Indian private sector to participate in the bidding for artillery guns is a welcome step. But it should have come years ago. There was no convincing rationale for the MoDs practice of trusting foreign private arms manufacturers with its armament details,while continuing to exclude domestic private firms. Thats set to change with the armys plans for upgunning 300 of its 130 mm M-46 field guns.
But this is just a first step and must be seen as the beginning of a longer,arduous process. The new acquisition process,approved at the DAC meeting,places global procurement at the bottom of the pile. Buying arms in the global market as a last resort would hold only if domestic ordnance production were up to the task of meeting the militarys quantitative and qualitative equipment needs. Indias ordnance factories and PSUs,such as HAL,till date have managed little beyond joint production; so far,private players have been restricted to the manufacture of ancillary equipment. The UPAs instinct to ban and blacklist foreign manufacturers after each procurement scandal has stalled Indias military modernisation and eroded the militarys conventional edge in the subcontinent. The artillery regiments,in particular,have been grounded,since most of the major foreign suppliers are blacklisted. Indias immediate military needs include new guns,air-defence missiles to protect naval assets,fighter aircraft and new-age submarines. Clearly,this is a tall order for the domestic ordnance industry to meet any time soon.