Enemy submarines, beware of the Indian Navy’s ‘Dolphin Hunter’

Carrying the moniker of ‘Dolphin Hunter’, Anjadip, is the navy’s third of the eight-ship Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft (ASW-SWC) project.

Enemy submarines, beware of the Indian Navy’s ‘Dolphin Hunter’

The Indian Navy will unleash another submarine hunter that will jostle with the waves for superiority in littoral combat environment. Carrying the moniker of ‘Dolphin Hunter’, Anjadip, is the navy’s third of the eight-ship Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft (ASW-SWC) project.

The warship will be formally commissioned into the Eastern Naval Command at Chennai Port on 27 February at a ceremony presided over by Admiral Dinesh K Tripathi, Chief of the Naval Staff.

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The commissioning ceremony highlights the nation’s accelerated progress towards achieving ‘Aatmanirbhar Bharat’ in defence, as the ASW-SWC project exemplifies the triumph of indigenous warship design and construction.

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INS Anjadip (Image courtesy: DDNews)

Capabilities of the ‘Dolphin Hunter’:

1. Built by Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers (GRSE), Kolkata

2. Anjadip is a state-of-the-art vessel specifically designed to address the challenges of the littoral combat environment—the coastal and shallow waters vital for the nation’s security.

3. The vessel is engineered to focus on the detection, tracking, and neutralisation of enemy submarines in coastal areas. 

4. The ship is packed with an indigenous, cutting-edge Anti-Submarine Warfare weapons and sensor package

5. It also carries Hull Mounted Sonar ‘Abhay’, and armed with Lightweight Torpedoes and ASW Rockets. 

6. It is agile and highly manoeuvrable warship equipped to undertake Coastal Surveillance, Low-Intensity Maritime Operations (LIMO) and Search & Rescue operations. 

7. The 77 meter-long ship, features a high-speed Water-Jet Propulsion system, enabling it to achieve a top speed of 25 knots for rapid response and sustained operations.

The induction of Anjadip, named after the historically significant island off the coast of Karwar, significantly bolsters the Navy’s capacity to safeguard India’s vast maritime interests and coastal approaches, including Tamil Nadu and Puducherry Area, marking another key step in transforming the Indian Navy into a formidable ‘Builder’s Navy’.

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