EW  DELHI: Faced with a huge shortfall of anti-tank guided missiles (ATGM),  coupled with the delayed induction of the indigenous `Nag' missile,  India will order a "large'' number of the quite-expensive Javelin ATGM  systems from the US.
The deal for the man-portable,  fire-and-forget Javelin ATGM systems will once again be a direct  government-to-government one under the American foreign military sales  (FMS) programme, without any global multi-vendor competition. 
Much  to the dismay of Russians and Europeans, India is increasingly taking  the FMS route to ink big arms deals with US. The biggest on the verge of  finalisation, of course, is for 10 C-17 Globemaster-III giant strategic  airlift for upwards of $3 billion.
As for the Javelin contract,  defence minister A K Antony told Parliament on Monday the "letter of  request'' to US government for procurement of the third-generation ATGM,  along with "transfer of technology'', would be issued soon.
This  means India will buy some of the 2.5-km range Javelin systems  off-the-shelf, while a much larger number will be indigenously  manufactured under licensed production. The US has already showcased the  ATGM system during bilateral combat exercises like `Yudh-Abhyas' in  Babina last October, as reported earlier.
While the exact number  of Javelin systems India will induct is yet to be decided, it could well  run into thousands. The Army, after all, has a shortfall of around  44,000 ATGMs of different types. "Though Army has an authorised holding  of 81,206 ATGMs, not even half that number is present in its  inventory,'' said a source.
This when Pakistan is inducting a  wide array of missiles, including 2,769 TOW-2A heavy anti-armour guided  missiles from US. Mechanised as well as regular infantry units armed  with advanced ATGM systems are deemed critical to slow down, if not  halt, enemy armoured thrusts into one's territory.
Indian  infantry units are as of now equipped with variants of the  second-generation 2-km-range Milan and 4-km-range Konkurs ATGMs,  produced by defence PSU Bharat Dynamics Ltd under licence from French  and Russian companies.
As for the third-generation Nag ATGM, with  a 4-km strike range, Army has placed an initial order for 443 missiles  and 13 Namicas (Nag missile tracked carriers). After 20 years of  development, the Nag is only now getting ready to enter the  production/induction phase.
The urgency about the fast-dwindling  ATGM stock can be gauged from the fact that Army has ordered 4,100  "advanced'' Milan-2T missiles, with "tandem warheads'', as well as  15,000 Konkurs-M missiles over the last couple of years.