The Indian Army has been embarrassed into
finally equipping all of its tanks with night vision equipment. This comes
after much media discussion of why 80 percent of Pakistani and all of the
Chinese tanks have night vision systems but only 20 percent of India’s do. The
main problem is the monumentally ineffective, obstructionist, and slothful
Indian military procurement bureaucracy.
When it comes to counterproductive
government bureaucracy, India leads the world. It’s not that the Indian Army
has not been trying. Starting in 2001, and for five years after that, Indians
struggled with the French Catherine thermal imagers installed in their new T-90
tanks. Thermal imaging forms a picture based on the heat it detects. Thus it
can see through dust storms and fog and spot warm bodies and vehicle engines.
This is the most effective form of night vision (as opposed to light
enhancement and infrared illumination). With the problems fixed in the first
600, India has bought another 400 Catherine Thermal Imaging systems in 2008.
CATHERINE FC THERMAL COMPACT IMAGER |
The Catherine FC thermal imaging cameras are built by electronics manufacturer
Thales, whose thermal imaging systems are popular in the United States as well.
The U.S. Marine Corps recently bought thermal imaging binoculars from Thales.
India was a special case because there were severe heat problems with their
Catherine sights, which explains why India turned to the Israeli TIFACS
(thermal fire control systems) for upgrading several thousand T-72s. India has
already bought thousands of smaller Israeli thermal devices for the infantry.
The Israeli thermal devices are built more with heat problems in mind.
Previously, only aircraft and tanks could carry the bulky thermal imaging
equipment. But over the last decade, new technology has made it possible to
build one kilogram (2.2 pound) thermal imaging rifle scopes. There are also
thermal binoculars can detect large vehicles up to 10 kilometers or more (and
individuals at about half that distance). In a place like northern India, you
can keep an eye on a large area, as enemy troops cannot hide the heat their
bodies produce. India has a lot of fog and mist that normally hides alot of
activity, as well as frequent dust storms. The larger thermal imagers, like those
used in tanks, have about the same range as the binoculars but show more detail
and cost about five times as much. The Indian Army also wants to buy more
thermal sights for rifles and machine-guns as well, for helicopter pilots.
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