INS Kochi Defence Preparedness Gets a Shot in the Arm
MUMBAI: India's defence preparedness just got a shot in the arm
with the commissioning of Indian Navy's latest stealth guided missile
destroyer, the INS Kochi. INS Kochi is the second ship of the
Kolkata-class (Project 15A) Guided Missile Destroyers.
Destroyers are second only to aircraft carriers in projecting raw combat
power on the high seas. Induction of the 7,500-tonne INS Kochi, the
second of the three Kolkata-class destroyers being built at Mazagaon
Docks (MDL) at Mumbai for over Rs 4,000 crore apiece, makes it the 10th
destroyer in India's combat fleet.
Although conceived as follow-on of the earlier Delhi class, this ship is
vastly superior and has major advancements in weapons and sensors. The
ship incorporates new design concepts for improved survivability,
stealth, sea-keeping and maneuverability.
With a displacement of 7,500 tons, the majestic ship spanning 164 metres
in length and 17 metres at the beam, is propelled by four gas turbines
and designed to achieve speeds in excess of 30 knots.
.INS Kochi is packed with an array of state-of-the-art weapons and
sensors, with a significant indigenous component. The ship has many
lethal weapons to her credit which include the successful fitments of
vertically launched missile system for long distance engagement of shore
and sea-based targets.
The ship is one of the few warships of the world and the second in the
Indian Navy to have Multi-Function Surveillance and Threat Alert Radar
to provide target data to Long Range Surface to Air Missile system.
The MF STAR and LR SAM systems are jointly developed by DRDO (Defence
Research and Development Organisation) and Israel Aerospace Industries
Ltd. To protect against incoming air borne and surface threats, at
medium and close in range, the ship has 76 mm and 30 mm gun mounts.
The ship has a complement of about 40 officers and 350 sailors. The
accommodation and living spaces have been designed with special emphasis
on ergonomics and habitability. The warship was commissioned by Defence
Minister Manohar Parrikar at the Naval Dockyard in Mumbai.
The first of this class, INS Kolkata, was commissioned in August last
year, while the third INS Chennai will be inducted towards end-2016.
There is also the even bigger ongoing Rs 29,644-crore project to build
another four stealth destroyers at MDL, with the first INS Visakhapatnam
slated for delivery in 2018-2019.
The Navy, on its part, has plans to become a 200-warship force with
around 600 aircraft and helicopters by 2027 to ensure it can effectively
guard the country's expanding geo-strategic interests in the backdrop
of the IOR emerging as "the world's centre of gravity".
The IOR has over 120 warships at any given time, with China fast becoming a force to reckon with in the region.
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