onsdag 22. oktober 2014

India og forsvarsmateriell

Why are India's air force planes falling out of the sky?

Indian Air Force"s C-17 Globemaster III, center, with Sukhoi Su-30MKI flies in formation whiles displaying aerial demonstration during Air Force Day at the air force station in Hindon near New Delhi, India, Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2014. 

Sukhoi 30 planes belonging to India's air force fly in formation with a Globemaster III

Are India's ageing air force planes falling out of the sky?
All air forces have accidents, but accounts of Indian warplanes crashing on training flights have become almost routine news.
The latest incident came earlier this week, when a Russian-made Sukhoi-30 crashed in eastern India - both pilots surviving after ejecting for unspecified reasons.
All five crew died in March this year on a training flight in their US-made Hercules transport aircraft.
'Flying coffin'
But it is the Russian-made aircraft that form the backbone of the Indian fleet which have been the most accident-prone. The MiG jet in particular has become known as the "flying coffin" or the "widow maker".
Two years ago, India's then defence minister told an astonished parliament that more than half the 872 MiGs it had purchased from Russia had been lost in accidents, at a cost of over 200 lives.
Apparently, pilots regularly complain that some MiG models land too fast and that the design of the window canopy means they can't see the runway properly.
The Indian air force has gradually been retiring the older planes - some dating back to the 1960s.
Yet only this month the air force chief warned the delay in introducing replacements was putting India's security at risk as parts of the fleet were on "their last legs".

A destroyed two-story Bank of Rajasthan buidling is seen on fire near Jullundur, India, Friday May 3, 2002, after an Indian Air Force MiG-21 jet crashed into the building.

An MiG-21 jet crashed into this building in Rajasthan in 2002
Meanwhile, India's regional rival China continues to leap ahead in both spending and firepower.
Indian-designed warplanes have so far not been up to the job. But more than two years since a deal was signed to buy 126 Rafale fighters from France, the bargaining goes on.
Some say it's not what India needs though.
If it does eventually buy French, that will only worsen matters, warns Delhi-based defence analyst Bharat Karnad.
"We have a diversity problem," he says, referring to the wide variety of planes the air force already uses, "making it much harder to keep training and maintenance up to standard".
The Russians have also been accused of being tardy with supplies of spare parts. India - now the world's largest arms importer - is increasingly turning to the West for its weapons. The US is now its number one supplier.
Yet Mr Karnad fears Western nations will hold up critical spare parts and support "as a means of political leverage on India", something he believes the Russians are less prone to do.
But it's not just the air force that has a problem with its gear.
Just yesterday [Tuesday], a former Indian navy chief lashed out at defence ministry as "so dysfunctional" he couldn't even order "a set of batteries" for his submarines.
Admiral DK Joshi made headlines last year after resigning following a series of submarine accidents that left 18 sailors dead. As it happens, the vessels involved were also Russian-made.
The new Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, partly won office on the back of hopes he will put India on course to becoming a superpower and has promised to modernise the military.

But it's an old challenge, says retired navy officer Uday Bhaskar. "Finding the solution is something that's eluded every Indian leader until now."

Sukhoi Crash Raises Fresh IAF Safety Concerns

AIN DEFENSE PERSPECTIVE » OCTOBER 24, 2014
The Indian air force fleet of some 200 Sukhoi Su-30MKI combat jets has been grounded after a crash. (Photo: Chris Pocock)
October 23, 2014, 1:36 PM
The crash of an Indian Air Force (IAF) Sukhoi Su-30 MKI on October 14 has led to the temporary grounding of the entire fleet of some 200 jets. The IAF’s safety record is again under scrutiny, with concerns about training and maintenance being voiced unofficially.
The aircraft crashed approximately 20 km from Pune airbase, near Mumbai, after both K-36DMzero-zero ejection seats inadvertently fired. The pilots survived the ejections. “A Court of Enquiry is in progress and certain specific checks are being conducted on the aircraft,” said a Ministry of Defense (MoD) statement.
A senior former IAF maintenance officer told AIN, on condition of anonymity: “It is likely that the seat cartridge was loose, something that has happened in the past. We have a sloppy system. We don’t react to incidents and equipment failures with speed. Moreover, squadrons have expanded and skilled trained manpower is not available.”
This is the fifth crash of an Su-30MKI in the past five years. Investigators attributed previous accidents to fuel pipeline leakage during ground run, autopilot failure and design deficiencies in the fire prevention system. “It is an attitude toward safety that is missing,” said a retired senior engineer.
In the last five financial years, 50 IAF aircraft have crashed, including 11 since the start of the current fiscal year in April 2014. According to Indian MoD figures released to Parliament last March, the equivalent of one fighter squadron—16-18 aircraft—is lost every two years. Deliveries of 72 more Su-30 MKIs are to be made by 2018.

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