Alarm bells ring in Navy as Scorpene sub details hacked

24 Aug 2016

Highly classified information on the technical details of six submarines being built in Mumbai, considered crucial for India's security, have been leaked - more than 22,000 pages that serve as the operating manual of the Scorpene submarine have become available with excerpts released online by an Australian newspaper.

The Scorpenes, being built at a cost of $3.5 billion at the Mazgaon docks in Mumbai, are considered some of the most advanced of their class in the world.

They are so silent underwater that they are extremely difficult, if not impossible to detect. But now their sonar capabilities, the noise they generate and details of the combat system they are armed with are totally exposed.

"The Navy Chief (Admiral Sunil Lanba) has been asked to analyse what exactly has been leaked," said defence minister Manohar Parrikar, describing the data release as "a hacking".

Navy sources said they are confident that the leak took place "outside India" and stressed that "the damage does not seem to be substantial" even as analysts in Australia suggested that's not correct.

The Australian newspaper reported that the leak occurred in France in 2011. At the moment, it's unclear where the leak of data came from France or India, where the six Indian submarines are being built as part of a deal with DCNS, the French shipbuilder.

 Submarines are considered the ultimate stealth weapon. Knowing how much sound a submarine makes underwater gives enemies the ability to know just where to look to detect the submarine. The sort of information that has been placed publicly is the stuff of a navy's nightmare. The Scorpene fiasco is being seen as the compromising of security of one of the world's biggest defence projects.

The DCNS Group has also been signed up by Australia for a $38-billion deal, but the documents that have been released cover the Scorpene-class model and do not contain any details of the vessel currently being designed for the Australian fleet.

Excerpts published in redacted form on the Australian newspaper's website contained highly sensitive details of the submarine including technical manuals and models of the boat's antennae.

The first of the Scorpene class submarines being built in India, the INS Kalvari, took part in sea trials in May and is expected to be inducted soon in the navy.