The Indian Inside of Me:
How Canberra Adopted the
“Indian Defence Procurement” Mindset
Australia’s defence procurement has undergone a spiritual conversion โ evolving into a mirror image of India’s farcical AMCA program, a masterclass in perpetual development and strategic dysfunction.
When Tony Abbott opened the floodgates to mass “skilled” migration from India, critics focused on the impact on the tech sector and the housing market. The most profound transformation would however, occur within the Russell Offices of Australia’s Defence honchos.
To understand how the Royal Australian Navy became a floating museum of unfinished ideas, one must understand the cultural engines now driving Canberra: Jugaad, The Cobra Effect, and Izzat.
We are now so busy “prototyping,” “reviewing,” and “pivoting” that we never actually have to go to sea.
The Cultural Architecture of Chaos
The transformation of Australian procurement relies on three core concepts imported from the subcontinent’s long struggle with bureaucracy.
Jugaad โ The Workaround
In India, Jugaad is the virtue of the “hack” โ bypassing rigid rules to find a clever, often fragile, solution. In defence, this manifests as “Frankenstein” engineering: forcing American software into British hulls with Australian sensors. Effective for keeping a 1980s taxi running in Mumbai, but disastrous for building a high-trust, functional fleet.
The Cobra Effect โ Perverse Incentives
This stems from a colonial-era failure where the British offered a bounty for dead cobras. Enterprising locals began breeding cobras to claim the reward. In Canberra, this is “Sovereign Industry Capability”: subsidise contractors to solve a “capability gap” and they will simply find more gaps to prolong the funding โ resulting in fewer ships at higher costs.
Izzat โ Prestige & The Captain’s Call
Izzat is social standing derived from being “above” the rules. In procurement it explains why we cancel perfectly good contracts to chase nuclear-powered dreams. Following a boring, logical plan is “low Izzat.” Making a Captain’s Call that shocks the world โ even if it leaves the country without a submarine for 20 years โ is “high Izzat.”
Comparative Analysis: Canberra vs. The AMCA
The following tables demonstrate how Australia has successfully replicated the Indian model of defence stagnation across aircraft, frigates, and submarines alike.
Table 1 โ India’s AMCA & The “Electronic Tower of Babel”
| Component | Origin | System Type | The Integration “Jugaad” | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary Airframe | India | AMCA (5.5 Gen) | Three conflicting tech-philosophies in one stealth skin. | 2008: Feasibility studies commence. |
| Active Radar / EW | France / USA | AESA / GaN Sensors | NATO-standard tracking expecting a Western “handshake” protocol. | 2018: India exits Russian FGFA to focus on AMCA. |
| Strategic Shield | Russia | S-400 Triumf | Proprietary Russian IFF encryption. | 2022: Engine talks with Safran & GE begin. |
| The Friction | N/A | Lock-on Risk | S-400 may “see” the AMCA as a hostile NATO signature. | 2035+: IOC expected. |
Table 2 โ Australia’s “Frankenstein” Hunter-Class Frigate
| Component | Origin | System Name | Impact on Vessel “Vitals” | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Hull | UK | BAE Type 26 | Optimised for ASW with specific weight balances. | 2018: BAE selected for $35bn SEA 5000. |
| The Radar | Australia | CEAFAR 2 | Massive phased-array panels shift the ship’s centre of gravity. | 2021: Weight increases to 10,000+ tonnes. |
| The Combat System | USA | Aegis (Lockheed) | Requires cooling and power not in the original UK design. | 2023: Fleet Review cuts from 9 ships to 6. |
| The Result | Australia | “Lead” Ship | Weight growth reduces speed and range before launch. | 2034: Projected delivery of HMAS Hunter. |
Table 3 โ The Submarine “Izzat” Market
| Origin | Model | Type | Australia’s “Jugaad” Strategy | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Japan | Soryu / Taigei | Lithium-Ion | Abandoned Quick-Fix: The Abbott “Captain’s Call.” Zero local maintenance capacity. | 2014: Abbott explores Soryu-class “off the shelf.” |
| France | Shortfin Barracuda | Conventional | Failed Hybrid: Turning a nuclear hull into a diesel boat. Scrapped after billions spent. | 2016: Turnbull pivots to France (Naval Group). |
| USA / UK | Virginia / SSN-AUKUS | Nuclear (SSN) | The Izzat Play: Nuclear status despite “unsolvable” shipyard supply gaps. | 2021: Morrison cancels French contract for AUKUS. |
| ASPI Proposal | Japanese Lease | Hybrid / Lease | The Final Hedge: Buying systems we can’t maintain to ensure “presence” in the water. | 2026: US/UK industrial reviews confirm gaps. |
Conclusion: The New Normal
By adopting the Indian model, Australia has achieved the ultimate strategic goal: we are now so busy “prototyping,” “reviewing,” and “pivoting” that we never actually have to go to sea.
We have found our inner Jugaad. The ships are heavy, the radars don’t talk to the missiles, and the sub-mariners have no subs โ but God, the Izzat has never been higher.