Context:
- Speculation over the commissioning of INS Aridhaman, India’s third nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine (SSBN), following a cryptic post by the Defence Minister.
- Marks a significant step in strengthening India’s nuclear triad and maritime deterrence capabilities.
Key Highlights:
SSBN Programme Developments
- INS Arihant (2016) – India’s first SSBN.
- INS Arighat (2024) – second SSBN.
- INS Aridhaman – third SSBN, likely commissioned after final trials.
- Next submarine of the Arihant class expected soon.
Technical Capabilities of INS Aridhaman
- Approx. 7000-tonne vessel with enhanced firepower.
- Can carry:
- Up to 24 K-15 Sagarika missiles
- Up to 8 K-4/K-5 nuclear-capable missiles
- Represents a significant upgrade over earlier submarines.
Strategic Significance: Nuclear Triad
- Nuclear triad: Capability to launch nuclear weapons from land, air, and sea.
- India joins elite group: USA, Russia, China, France, UK.
- Strengthens second-strike capability under India’s No First Use (NFU) doctrine.
Maritime Security Context
- Rising Chinese presence in the Indian Ocean, including dual-use research vessels.
- Need to counter threats from China and Pakistan.
- Changing warfare dynamics: conflicts increasingly multi-domain (land-air-sea integration).
Self-Reliance in Defence
- SSBN programme boosts indigenisation and defence manufacturing.
- Reduced dependence amid global disruptions (e.g., Russia-Ukraine war).
- Future plans include:
- Fourth Arihant-class submarine
- Indigenous SSN (nuclear attack submarine) by 2036
Challenges and Future Direction
- Balancing investment between submarine capability and emerging technologies like AI and autonomous systems.
- Need to maintain parity with China’s naval expansion.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- SSBN (Ship Submersible Ballistic Nuclear): Nuclear-powered submarines carrying ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads.
- SSN (Nuclear Attack Submarine): Designed for attack and tactical missions, not strategic nuclear deterrence.
- K-15 Sagarika Missile:
- Range: ~750 km
- Submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM).
- K-4 Missile:
- Range: ~3500 km (approx.)
- Enhances India’s long-range sea-based deterrence.
- Nuclear Triad:
- Land: ICBMs (Agni series)
- Air: Strategic bombers (Mirage 2000, Su-30 MKI modified)
- Sea: SSBNs (Arihant class)
- No First Use Policy (NFU): India commits to not using nuclear weapons unless attacked first.
- Indian Ocean Region (IOR): Strategic maritime zone critical for global trade and security.
- Strait of Hormuz: Key chokepoint influencing global energy security.
Relevant Mains Points:
Importance of Sea-Based Deterrence
- Provides survivable second-strike capability as submarines are difficult to detect.
- Ensures credible minimum deterrence in line with India’s nuclear doctrine.
- Acts as a deterrent against regional adversaries (China, Pakistan).
Changing Nature of Warfare
- Modern conflicts are multi-domain, involving rapid escalation across land, sea, air, cyber, and space.
- Example: West Asia conflicts and potential maritime escalation in Strait of Hormuz.
- Highlights need for integrated defence preparedness.
Strategic and Geopolitical Implications
- Enhances India’s stature as a responsible nuclear power.
- Strengthens India’s role in maintaining balance of power in the Indo-Pacific.
- Supports maritime security and freedom of navigation.
Challenges
- High costs and technological complexity of SSBN and SSN programmes.
- Need for advanced stealth, communication, and AI integration.
- Strategic competition with China’s expanding submarine fleet.
Way Forward
- Accelerate indigenous defence R&D and production.
- Integrate AI, autonomous systems, and advanced stealth technologies.
- Strengthen maritime domain awareness and naval infrastructure.
- Enhance tri-service coordination for multi-domain warfare readiness.
- Maintain balance between deterrence, diplomacy, and arms control commitments.
UPSC Relevance
- GS II – International relations, India’s strategic interests, Indo-Pacific security.
- GS III – Defence technology, internal security, indigenisation, nuclear policy.
- Essay – Changing nature of warfare, self-reliance in defence, deterrence theory.
