Germans may find it hard to sell their subs
Questions have arisen about the efficacy of German submarines just
before Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Chancellor Angela Merkel sit
down for talks in Berlin late this week when arms trade will be a
certain, but underplayed, segment of the discussions.
A submarine tender is too lucrative one to covet and like all big ticket
military hardware deals, sees tremendous undercutting of the rival’s
position. This time the contest among French, German and Russian
submarines promises to be no different. The last tender, close to Rs.
20,000 crore, was bagged by the French. The Germans were not considered
due to a corruption charge that was rejected by the courts here.
Technical problems
Fingers are being pointed at the poor performance of German submarines
in the South Korean and Greek navies. The Hindu has independently
verified that allegations about persisting technical problems with the
Korean’s HDW Type 214 submarines are correct. The informed sources also
confirmed that a prototype Greek submarine of German design too suffered
from serious problems.
But the Indian Navy, badly short of submarines and struggling to
complete the French Scorpene project, does not have any complaints about
its four German submarines. Sources in the Navy said the four HDW
submarines were working fine and they were satisfied with their
performance. The sources expressed ignorance about HDW submarines
malfunctioning in South Korea. But Korean diplomatic sources admitted
there were problems.
The German submarines with the Indian Navy seemed to have followed the
same trajectory as the VIP AgustaWestland helicopters. Of the 12
choppers, three have arrived while the import of the remaining has been
suspended due to bribery charge. Similarly, in the case of the German
submarines, two arrived from the OEM and the other two were assembled
here. Then the bribery charge struck and the option to build two more
was withdrawn.
Vital shortcoming
According to the sources, Korean submarines Son Won II, Jeongji and
Jung-geun were immobilised after the first submarine was badly damaged
on the high seas. It has also been alleged that the submarines suffer
noise problems. This is a vital shortcoming in a submarine which has to
be as noiseless as possible to avoid detection. Or, as Navy officials
say, they will be as easy to detect as some Chinese submarines that
tried to recce the Bay of Bengal. “We picked them up each time they
came,” claimed a Navy official.
Independent sources, however, said the noise levels of the German
submarines were lower than the requirement but higher than what the
manufacturers – ThyssenKrupp Marine Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft (HDW) –
had promised. The sources making the allegations also claimed HDW were
fined for the persisting technical problems but none could independently
verify the charge.
In the case of Greek submarine Papanikolis, the sources backed their
claims with video footage that showed an unusual tilt as it dived. The
Germans worked on the Papanikolis but the government has raised other
issues.
These problems mean it will not be easy sailing for the German submarines when they make a pitch for the Indian Navy tender.
Currently, the Ministry of Defence is looking at the configuration for
supply with circumspection and some more time might be required before a
firm decision is taken to call for bids.
Ironically, the allegations against the Germans have originated from one
of its close allies, thus indicating the cut-throat competition that is
always an integral component of such large military tenders.
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