By Adam Plowright | AFP
http://news.yahoo.com/leaked-letter-reveals-indias-military-weaknesses-071822609.html
Antony has since scrambled to
quell the controversy and has ordered a probe by the Central Bureau of Investigation
police force. He also attempted to shift the blame to General Singh, saying he had not made a
written complaint.
India remains concerned over China 's military build-up along the countries'
disputed border -- the trigger for a brief war between the Asian giants in 1962
-- and faces arch-foe Pakistan
to its west.
India 's military is also negotiating
to acquire a slew of new equipment from combat aircraft to submarines and
artillery.
It is currently finalising a deal with France 's
Dassault Aviation to buy 126 Rafale fighter jets in a contract worth an
estimated $12 billion.
http://news.yahoo.com/leaked-letter-reveals-indias-military-weaknesses-071822609.html
India's tank fleet lacks
ammunition, its air defences are "97 percent obsolete" and its elite
forces need essential weapons, the country's army chief wrote in an explosive
letter leaked on Wednesday.
The letter to the prime minister dated
March 12 -- widely reported by the Indian media -- lists shortcomings of the
armed forces in embarrassing detail in a serious blow to the government and the Asian giant's military
prestige.
Its publication also ups the stakes in
a public battle between army chief General V.K. Singh and the government which
began with a dispute over Singh's retirement earlier this year.
"The state of the major
(fighting) arms i.e. mechanised forces, artillery, air defence, infantry and special forces, as well as the engineers and
signals, is indeed alarming,"
Singh wrote in the letter, DNA newspaper reported.
The army's entire
tank fleet is "devoid of critical ammunition to defeat enemy tanks",
while the air defence system is "97% obsolete and it doesn't give the
deemed confidence to protect... from the air," he wrote.
The infantry is
crippled with "deficiencies" and lacks night fighting equipment,
while the elite special forces are "woefully short" of
"essential weapons."
Singh also told The Hindu newspaper
this week that he had informed Defence Minister A.K Antony of a $2.8 million
bribe offered to him in 2010, leading to questions as to why the government had not ordered an enquiry.
Speaking amid an uproar in parliament
over the leaked letter, Antony said that the
government had made efforts to ensure transparency in India 's
notoriously corrupt defence procurement processes.
"We have equally taken care to
speed up the modernisation of the armed forces. By doing that only we can
assure national security and we can protect every inch of our motherland,"
he told lawmakers.
In the letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, General
Singh reportedly blames the slow procurement process and lack of urgency among
bureaucrats for the "hollowness" of the 1.13-million-strong military,
the fourth largest in the world.
Senior opposition leader Arun Jaitley
from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) complained of the "alarming
situation" in which "letters which are otherwise intended to be
secret and meant to be kept secret find there way into the media."
"The fact that they can be leaked
and come into the public domain itself is a matter of serious concern," he
told parliament. The letter is likely to lead to a further deterioration in
relations between General Singh and his civilian bosses.
The army chief, who faces mandatory
retirement this May at the age of 62, was angered after losing a bid to stay in
office an extra year by changing his birth date registered in army records. He
claimed the birth date was wrongly recorded.
His complaints of
poor equipment and operational difficulties also run contrary to government defence spending announcements and
recent studies showing India as the world's biggest military hardware importer.
The
government
this month announced a 17-percent rise in defence spending to $40 billion in
its budget for 2012/13 -- following a 12-percent increase in the previous budget.
Between 2007 and 2011, India overtook China to be the biggest arms
importer, accounting for 10 percent of the global arms market, according to
recent data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).
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