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"Story of India’s herculean scuffle to get the Cryogenic Engine": India's heavy lift ambitions and ultra-low-cost model could put the likes of NASA out of business, an eventuality that the USA tried to delay India’s space program as long as it can

The Russians were offering a secret engine, the RD-56 or KVD-1, built by the Isayev Design Bureau. The KVD-1 had unsurpassed thrust and capabilities and NASA had nothing that could match the Russian engine for years
 |  Satyaagrah  |  Politics
Story of India’s herculean scuffle to get the Cryogenic Engine
Story of India’s herculean scuffle to get the Cryogenic Engine

25th December 1991, Moscow. The sickle hammer bearing the red flag was lowered, signaling the fall of the famous, mammoth, iron screen country. the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR).

The USSR was weakened by the western world’s constant pressure to push the country into a democracy. The power of the USSR was reduced to a minimum, and Russia as a country had come under the significant influence of the USA.

India was rapidly improving in the Space Research Programme and on 18th January 1991, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) entered into an agreement with Russian Space Agency Glavkosmos for the technology transfer of “Cryogenic Engine” which powers heavy rockets with cheaper fuel cost.

USA was watching India’s progress in space research and was constantly gathering information about  ISRO’s future plans. India which had already developed the ballistic missile ‘Agni’ and USA was suspecting that the technology transfer of cryogenic engine will power up India to become a space power, a privilege of the elite nations.

India is the only developing country with heavy lift ambitions and its ultra-low-cost model could one day put the likes of NASA out of business. That’s an eventuality that the United States wanted to delay India’s space program as long as it can.

So, what is this cryogenic engine and why is it important?

India had been using solid propellent fuel which needs a heavy fuel tank with a large quantity of the fuel. This only pushes the cost high but also restricts payload weight and the travel distance.

India was constantly on the lookout for fuel that can be light in weight and energy efficient and a cryogenic engine was the answer to it.

In that, the Hydrogen and Oxygen would be used in liquid form at high pressure which can fuel the lift of heavy rockets.

Author and broadcaster Brian Harvey write in his exhaustively researched book ‘Russia in Space: The Failed Frontier’ that in the late 1980s India was looking to develop a massive rocket to launch satellites into 24-hour orbit.

India first talked to Japan but nothing came of it. Hearing of these overtures, the Indians were approached first by General Dynamics Corporation, which offered an American engine. But the cost was prohibitive as was an offer shortly thereafter from Europe’s Arianespace.

“Just then a third approach came, this time from the Soviet Union, offering two engines and technology transfer for the more reasonable price of $200 million,” writes Harvey.

The Russians were offering a secret engine, the RD-56 or KVD-1, built by the Isayev Design Bureau. The KVD-1 had unsurpassed thrust and capabilities and NASA had nothing that could match the Russian engine for years. The rocket engine was originally developed as part of the Soviet manned moon landing program as far back as 1964.

On 18th January 1991, ISRO entered into an agreement with Russian Space Agency Glavkosmos for the technology transfer of a “cryogenic engine”.

ISRO and Glovkosmos suspected that the USA would object to this technology transfer under the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) – a Western cabal that aims to deny ballistic missile technology to non-Western countries, especially India.

And hence ISRO and Glovkosmos were ready with Plan B. According to this Glovkosmos would outsource the manufacturing of its cryogenic engine to Kerala Hi-tech Industries Limited (KELTEC) so that the technology would be available to India by this arrangement.

Aleksey Vasin, officer-in-charge of cryogenic technology in Glavkosmos, and ISRO Chairman U.R. Rao – believed that if Russian cryogenic technology was passed on to ISRO via KELTEC, technically it would not be a violation of the MTCR.

As expected in May 1992, the USA slapped sanctions on ISRO and Glovkosmos alleging that the arrangement violates MTCR.

India also pointed out the Americans had offered them the very same technology and had made no objections throughout the years 1988-92 when the arrangements had begun.

So does that mean the Americans were trying to achieve the dual aim of crippling both the Indian and Russian space programs? It was too obvious.

India and Russia said that the cryogenic engine technology was being used purely for scientific purposes and was not to be used in the missile. The MTCR was invited to inspect the technology arrangements.

Former US President Bill Clinton and his hawkish wife Hillary Rodham Clinton are for some inexplicable reason considered friends of India. It was under President Clinton that Russia backed off its proposals to transfer technology to India and suspended its agreement, invoking force majeure (circumstances beyond its control).

Under the revised Russia-India agreement in January 1994, Moscow agreed to transfer three, later renegotiated by India to seven fully assembled KVD-1 engines, without the associated technology. The United States also inserted a humiliating clause, according to which India would “agree to use the equipment purely for peaceful purposes, not to re-export it or modernize it without Russia’s consent”. No blueprints were to be given to India.

But the  Glovkomos Scientist developed some liking for ISRO scientists and they decided to help the Indian scientists.

However, with American spies crawling all over Russia during the early 1990s, transferring such a large cargo wasn’t going to be easy. “ISRO first contacted Air India but the airline said it could not transport the equipment without customs clearance. And that was not possible without the American lobby in Russia coming to know about it,” J. Rajasekharan Nair reveals in his book, Spies From Space: The ISRO Frame-Up.

So ISRO entered into an agreement with Russia’s Ural Airlines, which was ready to take the risk for a little extra money. Author and broadcaster Brian Harvey writes in his exhaustively researched book ‘Russia in Space: The Failed Frontier’.

According to Harvey, “The appropriate documents, instruments, and equipment were allegedly transferred in four shipments from Moscow to Delhi on covert flights by Ural Airlines. As a cover, they used ‘legitimate’ transhipments of Indian aircraft technology traveling the other way to Moscow for testing in Russian wind-tunnels.”

This was confirmed by cryogenic team leader Nambi Narayanan who told the Indian media he was on board the flights that transported the technology to India.

By this time USA had realized that further arm twisting would not do any good and decided to try other means to scuttle the Space Programme of India, as it would be a direct threat to NASA’s business opportunity.

Nambi Narayanan by now had become a household name, who along with D. Sasikumar was in charge of cryogenic engine technology at ISRO.

The CIA seems to have been entrusted with the work of aborting ISRO’s cryogenic engine dream.

Nambi Narayanan being an important cog in the wheel was arrested and tortured by the Kerala Police and the Indian Intelligence Bureau. Nambi Narayanan was alleged to have sold important military information through 2 Maldivian women whom he had never met at all.

The first hint there was a foreign hand trying to destroy – or at the very least slow down – India’s space program surfaced in 1997 when five leading scientists – Satish Dhawan, U.R. Rao, Yashpal, Rodham Narasimha, and K. Chandrasekhar – along with former Chief Election Commissioner T.N. Seshan wrote a joint letter to the government, saying the espionage charges against Nambi Narayanan and Sasi Kumaran were fabricated.

These were not ordinary people – they were public figures who were building India’s space future. And yet despite their plea, the IB tortured Nambi Narayanan to get him to implicate higher-ups at ISRO. If Narayanan had cracked and acquiesced, perhaps the entire organization would have collapsed.

It is a measure of how successful the CIA was in this spy game that its agents in the Kerala Police and Intelligence Bureau (IB) were able to have a swing at just about everyone in the cryogenic project, writes Rajasekaran Nair, in his book ‘The book Spies from Space: The Isro Frame-up’

By removing the important man from the project USA had successfully scuttled the dream of ISRO and India for at least by two decades.

The case was transferred to CBI. Further investigation proved that Nambi Naryanan and Sasi Kumaran were not involved in any anti-national activity and they were acquitted and received monetary compensation for the custodial hardship and social humiliation they went through.

ISRO in the later years successfully developed the cryogenic engine and entered the realm of space business by launching several GSLV rockets and putting Indian and several other countries' satellites into orbit at a fraction of NASA’s cost.

India also sent a Vehicle to Mars at one-fourth cost and that too in its maiden attempt compared to USA’s several attempts.

Today, India stands tall as a formidable space power.

References:

thecommunemag.com

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