Visitors walk passed the BAE Systems M777 Howitzer artillery piece at the 7th International Land and Naval Defence Systems Exhibition in New Delhi, India.  — Photo by AP

NEW DELHI: India has agreed a $560 million deal to buy 145 howitzer guns from BAE Systems of the United States as it moves ahead to upgrade its antiquated military hardware, an official said on Saturday.

India is updating its military capabilities with hardware worth tens of billions of dollars.

“The contract for the ultra-light howitzers was awarded on Friday to BAE Systems Inc” of the United States, a unit of Britain-based BAE Systems Plc, a senior defence ministry official said.

The government will spend 30 billion rupees ($560 million) on the field guns, the official said.

The howitzers, with a maximum range of 30km, will be used by the army’s mountain artillery divisions along India’s high-altitude frontiers.

India has fought three wars with Pakistan since independence in 1947, but China is increasingly seen as the main focus of its ambitious military modernisation and procurement policy.

The military is acquiring a slew of new equipment from combat aircraft to submarines and in March, the country announced that military spending for the current financial year would total 1.93 trillion rupees ($40 billion).

Saturday’s announced purchase marks the first time in more than a quarter of a century that India is buying howitzers.

India last purchased guns for the army in 1986 when it bought 410 howitzer field guns from the Swedish arms giant AB Bofors.

A year later, Swedish media alleged top Indian politicians and military officials had been bribed in connection with the deal.

Corruption accusations over the Bofors contract cost then Congress prime minister Rajiv Gandhi the 1989 national elections.

His name was cleared by an Indian court in 2004, 13 years after he was killed by a Tamil suicide bomber.

But the scandal cast a long shadow. Analysts say concern over graft has made it difficult to get Indian defence deals cleared with bureaucrats unwilling to make decisions for fear of being accused of ‘procurement irregularities’. Finalisation of the howitzer deal could take up to a year, other defence officials said.—AFP

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From hard to harder

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