After importing rocket launchers and missiles from India,
Armenia is now importing an anti-drone system from its South Asian friend. This
has come when the conflict-ravaged country is keen to learn from India on how
to modernize Soviet-era defense equipment.
Even as a fragile peace holds
between the Caucasian countries, New Delhi is contemplating the supply of a
fresh batch of military equipment to Armenia.
People who did not wish to be
identified said Armenia has contracted to buy India-developed Zen Anti-Drone
System (ZADS). The Indian Air Force (IAF) purchased this anti-drone system in
2021, and the Indian Army has ordered 20 units of C-UAS worth INR 2.27 billion
(US$27.3 million). Delivery of the C-UAS to the Indian Army will commence in
March 2024.
Officials who did not wish to be identified confirmed to the EurAsian Times
that Armenia has contracted the Hyderabad-based Zen Technologies for INR340
crore (US$41.5 million) for the anti-drone system order that includes both
training solutions and an anti-drone system.
“The Zen Technologies
Anti-Drone System is a proven technology, having been inducted in the IAF and
now the Indian Army opting for it. And Armenia realizes that once Indian armed
forces induct it, it must be good,” the source said.
The anti-drone system from Zen
Technologies works on drone detection, classification, and tracking of passive
surveillance, camera sensors, and threat neutralization through jamming drone
communication.
Zen Anti-Drone System, a Counter Unmanned Aerial System (CUAS), is a
multi-layer multi-sensor Architecture that provides comprehensive security
against drone attacks.
The Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict
heralded the arrival of drones on the modern-day battlefield, with Armenia
acknowledging that the Turkish Bayrakter TB-2 had made the difference, forcing
them to concede defeat.
The Bayraktar TB2, developed
and manufactured by Baykar, a Turkish defense company, is the size of
a small airplane and equipped with four laser-guided missiles. It has an endurance of
12 hours when operating 550 nautical miles from its base. This allows it to be
‘eyes in the sky’ for long periods.
Armenia, a small landlocked
nation nestled in the South Caucasus region of Eurasia, has emerged as a strategic
partner for India. In 2022, when India inked the
deal to supply PINAKA multi-barrel rocket launchers (MBRL), anti-tank
munitions, and ammunition worth US$250 million to Armenia, it was seen as New
Delhi taking a position in the conflict. It was the first export of PINAKA by
India.
Armenia opted for
Pinaka MBRLs, considered at par with the American HIMARs, for its shoot and
scoot capability. The mobility is an advantage as adversary Azerbaijan has been
deploying drones, including suicide drones.
While India has not confirmed
publicly that it is supplying the Akash SAM system to Armenia, Bharat Dynamics
Limited (BDL) did announce it has received export orders from a friendly
country.
The weapons purchased by
Armenia have proven to be “very satisfactory,” the chairman of Armenia’s
parliamentary committee on defense and security affairs, Andranik Kocharyan,
recently stated without naming India.
“Our news media, our people are discussing all day long what weapons were
brought, from what country, where it was tested. The relevant division of the
defense ministry is also testing this weaponry, and the tests are very
satisfactory,” said Kocharyan.
“The list of the countries is
that which is being discussed, perhaps a bit more or less. That’s not what
matters; what matters is that the work in that direction is proceeding
successfully.”
Burgeoning India-Armenia Defense Ties
A top Armenian security
official and Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia, Armen Grigoryan,
visited New Delhi on August 28 to meet with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi
and National Security Advisor Ajit Doval. In light of this, it is said that India
is contemplating the supply of a fresh batch of military equipment to Armenia.
In 2022, India stepped up as a
defense supplier to Armenia, embroiled in a protracted conflict with
Azerbaijan. The first consignment of weapons was delivered last year via Iran.
Armenia, reports the Economic
Times, is keen to modernize its military arsenal, primarily of Soviet and
Russian origin. The country wants to learn how to upgrade Soviet and Russian
equipment in its inventory and integrate it with the Western system.
Enhanced
PINAKA rocket, developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation
(DRDO) successfully flight-tested from Integrated Test Range, Chandipur, in
Odisha on November 04, 2020.
The dialogue with India is
not just about procurement but also about potential joint ventures for local
assembly of equipment and training facilities for Armenian officers.
“India possesses several
Soviet and Russian-made defense equipment. It has successfully modernized
Soviet and Russian-era defense items. This is very impressive,” Colonel
Zhiriayar Amirkhanian, assistant to the chief of defense staff, was quoted by
the Economic Times. “We in Armenia have several Soviet and Russian-designed
equipment, and we want to learn from India’s experience.”
Armenia is apprehensive that Azerbaijan may take advantage of chaos and
conflicts in other parts of the globe and launch a fresh military assault
against Armenia.
France has also announced to
send military aid to Armenia, the beleaguered country seeking to diversify its
arms imports and find new allies after Russia failed to provide the nation with
ordered weapons worth around US $400 million (it has not yet returned the
money).


0 comments: