The government is set upon privatising defence production
in the country. Both foreign and Indian private companies are being invited to enter
defence production and the manufacture of hi-tech weaponary. This has serious
implications for national sovereignty and the future course of the country.
The Ministry of Defence has finalised its new policy for
defence production. It has decided to identify six Strategic Partners (SPs)
from domestic Indian companies. These companies will partner foreign weapons
manufacturers to build defence production enterprises in India.
The policy sets out four segments in defence production
which will be open to the strategic partners from the private sector. These are
helicopters, single engine fighter aircraft, submarines and armoured fighting
vehicles.
Already some of the big corporates have entered the
defence production sphere such as the TATA group, Reliance India Ltd, Reliance
ADAG, Mahindra group, Larsen & Tubro, Bharat Forge and Ashok Leyland –
Hinduja group and others. It will be from these companies that the initial six
strategic partners will be chosen.
The blueprint for privatisation was set in motion with
the announcement by the government of allowing 100 per cent foreign direct
investment in defence production. In the name of indigenisation of defence
production, tie-ups between domestic private companies and foreign
multinationals to set up joint production enterprises are envisaged.
At present the bulk of defence production is undertaken
by public sector enterprises and ordnance factories. The government has already
delicenced 60 to 70 per cent of the production reserved for the public sector.
It is planning to allot 25 per cent of the defence PSUs turn over to the
private sector in the first phase.
As the private sector expands in defence production, the
privatisation of the defence PSUs and disinvestment will continue apace. For
the first time a defence PSU, the Bharat Earth Movers Ltd (BEML) is being
privatised through a “strategic sale” of 26 per cent equity to a private party.
The BEML is one of the largest public sector defence production enterprises.
Handing over this vital enterprise to the private sector will be a clear signal
to both foreign weapons manufacturers and the domestic private sector that
there is a bonanza in arms manufacturing open to them in India.
The issue of national sovereignty is very much relevant
in the context of the privatisation of the defence production sector. The entry
of foreign arms manufacturers must be seen in the background of the Indo-US
military cooperation agreement and the Logistics Exchange Agreement signed with
the United States. The interlocking of the US and Indian armed forces and their
“interoperability” will dictate the pattern of defence production in the
country in which the big corporates both foreign and Indian will be involved.
Already the ADAG Reliance Defence & Engineering
Company has entered into a repair and servicing agreement for the US 7th Fleet
warships at the company’s Pipavav shipyard. This comes under the logistics
exchange agreement wherein US naval ships can dock at Indian ports for
maintenance and servicing. The nexus of Indian corporates in arms manufacturing
with the US armed forces raise disturbing questions about encroachment on
India’s sovereignty and vital defence and strategic policy making.
The entry of big corporates into arms manufacturing will
lay the basis for a “military industrial complex” in India. The burgeoning
corporate involvement in weapons production will bring in an altogether new
calculus to India’s strategic and foreign policy making.
It is well known that the big arms manufacturers-armed
forces-State nexus in the United States provides the impetus for militarism and
the US wars of aggression. India by adopting a similar pattern of corporate
arms manufacturers-State nexus will be fuelling demand for more armaments and
aggressive national chauvinism. The privatisation of defence production in
India is thus fraught with serious consequences. It will distort the very
priorities of national development and endanger social welfare.
The privatisation of defence production must be halted.
Instead there has to be indigenisation of defence production by expanding the
scope of defence production in the public sector through technological
upgradation and enhanced research and development.
No comments:
Post a Comment