Sorry I wasn't clear. I'm sure assembly happens in India, and although I wouldn't be able to give you a breakdown of the components that we make ourselves (vs the ones we import), I believe that we're quite self-reliant on the manufacture too.
All I'm saying is that if we were to go by the development timelines of other space agencies - and note the number of liquid motors designed and flown, or even just the design iterations for the same motor - before said agency moved on to make motors for a different thrust-class (say First stage vs Orbital Insertion / 2nd Stage) : we've still got a long way to go.
The Vikas has been in development since the '70s. The French were helping us out in the beginning. The CS engine for the GSLV is Russian, and all we did for the first launch was integrate it into the LV (Yes, that is by no means uncomplicated, but surely ground-up design is more so).
I don't
think we've had the number of man-hours go into a program for the development of a first-stage liquid engine. I say this, while being very much aware of the existence of the dedicated ISRO Liquid Propulsion Systems Centre.
And if we're talking about clustered engines, IIRC, the first ever test of a clustered engine happened in 2010 (with Vikas).
It wasn't a judgment of competence. Just an
assessment opinion of current capability. We'll get there. And if indeed, we're really serious about HSF, we'll get there sooner rather than later. Even though Indian astronauts training/living in B'lore might be expected to be unfazed by vibrations - given their extensive experience with potholed roads