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Technology
Enough is not being done by the defence establishment to get the private sector industry on board in our acquisition and development programmes. Marginalising a vital arm and a national asset like the private sector industry is a serious omission, entirely to the detriment of our self-reliance and defence preparedness.
Modern wars hips are divided into several categories and are classified according to their role and capability. The destroyer is generally regarded as the dominant surfacecombat vessel of most modern blue water navies. However, the once distinct roles and appearances of cruisers, destroyers, frigates and corvettes have blurred as modern warships, and are armed with a mix of antisurface, anti-submarine and anti-aircraft weapons. Class designations no longer indicate a displacement hierarchy and the size of all vessel types have grown beyond the definitions used in the 20th century. The evolving technologies and need for sophistication in future naval combatants demand several new design features giving the ship enhanced operational capabilities in terms of hull design, stealth, propulsion, power systems and a suite of sensor, weapon and communication systems to match the role and capability requirements.
The operational battle space environment is dense and complex. Data from the sensors and systems are transmitted in real time to the command centre and it integrates this data and the information from external sources including data links, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and airborne warning and control system. A computer-aided action information organisation (CAIO) system compiles, maintains and displays the tactical situation and provides real time battlefield awareness. The combat management system (CMS) provides the decision support functions to take or suggest the best decision in real time for designating the optimum weapon system for the threat detected.
The future ship building programme of the Indian Navy will have an increasing thrust on indigenous design, construction, equipment and systems. Evolving technologies and need for multiplicity of roles of future warships call for adopting bold new strategies in design and construction. Stealth technologies and special hull design will give the modern warship a reduced radar cross section as well as electromagnetic, acoustic and infrared signatures. Advanced propulsion and power management systems will provide the speed, reach and capability to operate the sensors, weapons and other equipment, plant and machinery on board.
The Modern Warship
The modern warship should have a multirole, multi-mission capability. This ship should be capable of operating in a multithreat, multi-dimensional scenario, including space and information warfare. It should be capable of a wide range of surface warfare, anti-aircraft/missile defence, anti-surface warfare, electronic warfare, information warfare missions by using weapons and sensors in a net-enabled environment in blue waters and littorals scenarios. It should have multi-source data fusion and system integration for target detection, identification, tracking, threat evaluation, weapon designation, fire control solutions and weapon systems.
The Sensor Suite
The sensors on board should be capable of detecting airborne threats, surface targets, low flying (sea skimming) missiles and submarines. They should be capable of detecting electromagnetic and infrared signals. Electro-optic sensors would also be used in close-in situations.
Weapon Systems
The weapon systems on board should be capable of engaging airborne targets, surface targets, low flying (sea skimming) missiles and submarines at medium-to longranges. They should be capable of engaging close-in threats and provide point defence.