Yesterday, the Indian Navy, in the presence of Admiral RK Dhowan,
India’s current chief of naval staff, launched its latest stealth guided missile
destroyer with a ceremony held at Mazagaon Dock Limited (MDL),
Mumbai. The 7,300 ton Visakhapatnam is the first of four
planned Visakhapatnam-class (Project 15B) vessels, based on the
older Kolkata-class destroyers design (Project 15A), to enter Indian
service.
The other
three vessels will be launched at an interval of three years at a total cost of
INR 293.40 billion ($4.89 billion). According to Indian naval officials, the
164 m-long Visakhapatnam will be commissioned in July 2018. The Kolkata-class
destroyer INS Kolkata (Project 15A) was commissioned in August
2014, with the two remaining vessels of the class to be commissioned by 2016.
According
to IHS Jane’s Defense Weekly:
Vishakhapatnam‘s
key differences from the Project 15A class include the relocation of its sonar
to the bow from the hull; the design of its mast, which houses its main radar,
has also been revised to further reduce its radar cross section. Other changes
include reshaping of the hull to accentuate its stealth features and the
addition of a rail-less helicopter traversing system.
Indian
naval officials claim that over 65 percent of the Vishakhapatnam is
indigenously sourced, including 11 of its weapon and associated sensor
systems, IHS Jane’s Defense Weekly reports.
The
principal armament of the Visakhapatnam-class will be eight BrahMos supersonic cruise
missiles, which boast an operating range of 290km and were
co-developed by India’s Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO)
and the Russian defense industry.
In
addition, the ships will be equipped with the Barak-8/NG — an Indo-Israeli
surface-to-air missile (SAM) — jointly developed by Rafael-IAI and the DRDO.
The weapon was successfully tested in Israel in November 2014. The Visakhapatnam
can carry up to 32 of these medium-long range air defense missiles.
Furthermore,
the ship boasts a license-built 76 mm Oto Melara Super Rapid Gun, four
fully-automated Russian AK-630 close-in weapon systems (likely fitted on the
vessel’s bow), and a yet-to-be-selected 127 mm gun (however, local media sources claim
that the ship will just be armed with a 127 mm main gun instead of a 76
mm Super Rapid Gun Mount).
“The
destroyer will also be fitted with IAI-Elta EL/M-2238 S-band (2 to 4 GHz) 3-D
volume air surveillance radar (STAR) radar and a Thales LW-08 D-band air search
radar,” IHS Jane’s Defense Weekly notes.
The Multi-Function Surveillance Threat Alert Radar (MF-STAR) is the Israeli
equivalent to the U.S. Navy’s Aegis Combat System and allegedly
on par with the Chinese “Aegis” system installed on the Type 052D Multirole Destroyer.
For
antisubmarine warfare, the new stealth guided-missile destroyer
features twin-tube launchers and RBU-6000 Smerch-2 rocket launchers. It
can also carry two multiple-role helicopters (e.g., Sea King or HAL Dhruv
helicopters). The turbines of the ship were constructed in Ukraine, whereas Russia was responsible for
“propellers and shafting, assorted weaponry, sensors and radar.”
India’s
new stealth guided-missile destroyer will be a multi-mission ship, capable of
supporting expeditionary and surface strike groups. It will be a welcome new
asset as India’s navy tries to deter Chinese intrusions into the Indian Ocean
and particularly to boost India’s antisubmarine warfare capabilities. The
Diplomat
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