Warships to guard INS Vikramaditya from aerial attacks enroute home.

Aircraft
carrier INS Vikramaditya will not have any air defense systems on board
to protect itself from aerial attacks while coming home from Russia and
the Navy has sent warships to escort it safely. To provide it
protection from aerial attacks, the Navy has chosen the controversial
Barak missiles, which will be integrated with the aircraft only after it
reaches India.
“The aircraft
carrier Vikramaditya does not have its own air defense missile system.
We have chosen the Barak missile to be fitted on board once it arrives
in India,” a Navy official said in New Delhi. The escort group of
warships has been sent to Russia to bring the carrier to India through a
classified route to bring it to its home base in the Arabian Sea, they
said.
It is believed that the escort group also includes
underwater vessels for providing security to the warship. The Barak
missiles, the Navy’s choice for the aircraft carrier, are also in
controversy in view of an ongoing CBI probe against them in connection
with an alleged bribery scandal of 2006. The Defense Acquisition
Council, the apex defense ministry body for deciding on acquisitions,
has also formed an independent committee to take a decision on whether
to buy the missiles or not.
Defense Minister AK Antony will
induct the long-delayed aircraft carrier into the Navy in a shipyard in
Russia, where the second-hand warship has been undergoing refurbishment
for the last over six years. The Navy has plans of bringing the warship
to India and deploy it at the newly-developed Karwar naval base called
Project Seabird. The warship, which was given for ‘free’ to India in
2004, is ultimately going to cost more than Rs 12,000 crore to the
nation.
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