Starting Afresh
Aditya Kakkar
India’s land armoured vehicles are in dire need of upgrade and the government has once again trained its guns on the Futuristic Infantry Combat Vehicle (FICV) and Future Ready Combat Vehicle (FRCV) programme. The FICV project is once again set to take off after years of indecision and delays as the project worth nearly Rs 60,000 crore has now been approved by a panel of independent expert monitors (IEMs) with the army keen to replace the ancient Soviet-era BMP-2 infantry combat vehicle fleet which had entered into service in 1981.

Private entities such as L&T, Mahindra, Reliance Defence and companies under the Tata Group bid for the contract to develop 2160 FICVs after the project’s approval in October 2009 but several delays plagued the acquisition process. The FICV project will be developed from scratch under the ‘Make’ procedure with the defence ministry bearing 90 per cent of the development cost. The FICV project is being seen as a building block for R&D in domestic companies.
The FICV is a system of system (SoS) project with advanced operational capabilities and would need innovation and reliable automotive, armament, opto-electronics and armour material. It is to be developed keeping in mind India’s terrain and is intended to safely transport mechanised infantry in the battlefield while providing support to cover their dismounted operations. Additionally, it must also be able to destroy tanks and other weapon platforms.
The Indian Army has put forth the necessary operational capabilities of the FICV as follows:
Fire Power: It should be able to destroy enemy tanks at long ranges and also destroy armoured personnel carrier/ infantry car
Subscribe To Force
Fuel Fearless Journalism with Your Yearly Subscription
SUBSCRIBE NOW
We don’t tell you how to do your job…
But we put the environment in which you do your job in perspective, so that when you step out you do so with the complete picture.

VIDEO