All India DRDO Technical
Officers’ Association (AIDTOA) welcomes the decision of Ministry of Defence asking the DRDO to indigenously
develop and produce Man-Portable Anti-Tank Guided Missile (MPATGM) for the
Army cancelling the $500 million deal for Spike
ATGM with Israel.
DRDO has successfully produced the Nag and Anamika ATGMs
and is confident about providing the Army with an MPATGM of 3rd generation
missile technology, at par with Spike. It won’t also need any transfer of
technology. Importing a foreign ATGM at this stage would adversely impact the
programme for indigenous development of the weapon system by DRDO.
In 2009, the MoD accepted the requirement of buying 321 ATGM
launchers and 8,356 missiles, with 30 per cent offsets and a transfer of
technology clause. An option of approaching the US for buying Javelin ATGM was
also explored, but the US government was not amenable to transfer of
technology.
Spike missiles of Rafael, Israel underwent trials in 2011-12 and
the trials highlighted a problem with one of the two homing devices in the
launcher which led to constitution of a study group. In the experts committee
to review the evaluation report and explore the possibility of an indigenous
missile system, there was divergence in the views of the DRDO representatives
and Army representatives over the case. The matter was eventually resolved
earlier this month with Army headquarters agreeing to retract the Request for
Proposal (RFP) for ATGM launchers and missiles.
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