Meaning
Attack submarines are naval platforms designed primarily for anti-submarine warfare (ASW), anti-surface warfare (ASuW), intelligence gathering, and sea-denial operations. Unlike SSBNs, they are tactical and operational assets, not strategic nuclear deterrents.
Types of Attack Submarines
A. Diesel-Electric Attack Submarines (SSK)
- Use diesel engines on surface and battery power underwater
- Smaller, cheaper, and extremely silent at low speeds
- When fitted with Air Independent Propulsion (AIP), they can remain submerged for up to 2 weeks
Key Features
- High stealth in littoral and choke-point waters
- Ideal for coastal defence, ISR, and sea-lane denial
- AIP-enabled SSKs can be quieter than nuclear submarines
Indian Examples
- Kalvari class (Project-75)
- Sindhughosh class (Kilo)
- Shishumar class (Type-209)
B. Nuclear-Powered Attack Submarines (SSN)
- Powered by nuclear reactors
- Virtually unlimited range and endurance
- Faster and capable of sustained deep-sea operations
Key Features
- Ideal for blue-water navy operations
- Can escort carrier battle groups
- Superior for long-range surveillance and tracking enemy submarines
Indian Status
- No indigenous SSN currently in service
- INS Chakra II (Akula class) leased from Russia, decommissioned in 2021
- INS Chakra III (Akula class) expected
- Indigenous Project-75 Alpha SSNs planned
Strategic Importance of Attack Submarines
- Sea-denial and area dominance
- Protection of Sea Lines of Communication (SLOCs)
- Intelligence, Surveillance & Reconnaissance (ISR)
- Tactical superiority in Indo-Pacific littoral zones
Ballistic Missile Submarines (SSBN)
Meaning
Ballistic Missile Submarines (SSBNs) are strategic nuclear platforms capable of launching Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBMs) armed with nuclear warheads. They form the most survivable leg of a nuclear triad.
Key Characteristics
- Nuclear propulsion for long endurance
- Designed for stealth patrols, not combat engagement
- Carry long-range SLBMs for assured retaliation
- Operate as second-strike platforms
SSBNs in India
- INS Arihant (S2)
- India’s first operational SSBN
- Part of Advanced Technology Vessel (ATV) programme
- Carries:
- 12 × K-15 SLBMs (750 km range) OR
- 4 × K-4 SLBMs (3,500 km range)
- INS Arighat (S3)
- Improved successor of Arihant
- Enhanced missile and sensor capabilities
- S4 & S5
- Under development / planning
- Expected to carry higher-range SLBMs
Strategic Significance
- Completes India’s Nuclear Triad
- Provides credible minimum deterrence
- Ensures assured second-strike capability
- Enhances strategic stability in Indo-Pacific
- Reduces vulnerability to first-strike scenarios