Source:The Times OF India
Indian  plan to bolster  Air defence surveillance network, IAF will commission a  spanking new Israeli medium-power radar (MPR) at Naliya in Gujarat this  week.
"This  state-of-the-art radar, to be named Arudhra, is being inducted towards  strengthening the air defence in the Saurashtra-Kutch region and  constitutes an important component in IAF's plan to achieve  network-centric operations," said an officer.
IAF  chief Air Chief Marshal P V Naik will be inducting the radar, which has  a range of over 300 km, at the Naliya airbase on Friday after the  commanders' conference of the South-Western Air Command.
AF  has already inked contracts for 19 LLTRs (low-level transportable  radars), four MPRs and 30 indigenous medium-range Rohini radars, apart  from also planning a major induction of long-range surveillance radars  (LRSRs) and high-power radars (HPRs) to bolster air defence coverage in  "hilly terrain" in the hinterland as well as along the borders with  China and Pakistan.
India  is also moving towards procuring nine more Aerostat radars to add to  the two EL/M-2083 Israeli Aerostats inducted earlier as well as two  additional AWACS (airborne warning and control systems) to supplement  the first three Israeli Phalcon AWACS bought under a $1.1-billion deal.
The  overall aim of all this is to ensure that the Indian airspace, which  still has several gaping holes, especially over central and peninsular  India, becomes impregnable against hostile aircraft, drones and  helicopters.
With  advanced "electronic counter-counter measures", the new radars being  inducted will be integrated into the IACCS (integrated air command and  control system), the fully-automated network being established to  integrate the wide array of military radars with each other as well as  with civilian radars.
IAF,  in fact, has plans to establish 10 IACCS nodes to cover virtually the  entire country, with quick transfer of data from different radars as  well as ground stations of AWACS to one central place.
