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05 OCTOBER, 2018 - SOURCE:
FLIGHT DASHBOARD - BY: GREG WALDRON - SINGAPORE
The chief of the
Indian air force has defended the Narendra Modi government’s decision to obtain
36 Dassault Rafale fighters off the shelf, after terminating the long-running
Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) deal.
Rafale with Exocet - Le Bourget 2017 - Photo: Per Gram
Air Chief Marshall
BS Dhanoa describes the 2016 decision to obtain the 36 aircraft as an
“emergency buy” to shore up India’s falling number of fighter squadrons. The
nation has 33 combat squadrons against an authorised strength of 42.5
“The MMRCA had
reached an impasse due to irreconcilable differences between Dassault and
Hindustan Aeronautics with respect to additional man hours to be used by HAL in
production of Rafale, the cost increase thereof, and higher non-recurring costs
for new production facilities.”
Also at issue in
the 126 fighter acquisition was which party, HAL or Dassault, would be
responsible for jets produced by HAL under licence. Dassault was named the main
contender for the requirement in 2012 after a long-running competition among
leading fighter types.
Original MMRCA
plans called for 18 aircraft to be produced in France, and 108 by HAL.
Dhanoa, speaking
in a recent press conference to mark the 86th anniversary of the Indian Air
Force, said that the impasse gave the air force three choices. These were to
wait for HAL and Dassault to come to terms, reissue the request for proposals
and delay the introduction of new jets by six years or more, or make an
“emergency” buy.
“If we had gone
for another aircraft besides Rafale, it would have delayed things another six
years,” he says. “So, the government took a bold step and bought 36 aircraft.
The immediate problem is solved, and we will have a high performance, high tech
aircraft that will offset the capabilities of that adversaries have been
acquiring over time.”
Subsequent to the
MMRCA cancellation, New Delhi had a less refined requirement for 110
single-engined fighters, which limited the field to the Lockheed Martin F-16V and
Saab Gripen E. As with MMRCA, this deal would have required most of the
aircraft to be produced locally.
In April 2018, New
Delhi abandoned this, and issued an RFI for 110 single and twin seat fighters,
but this time allowing for twin-engined jets.
In his briefing,
Dhanoa said that six parties replied to the RFI. These are likely to be the
same contenders for the MMRCA deal: the Boeing F/A-18E/F Block III, Dassault
Rafale F3R, Eurofighter Typhoon, Lockheed Martin F-16 Block 70, United Aircraft
Corp MiG-35 and Saab Gripen E.
He added that an
RFP will be issued. Given that the air force conducted such an extensive
evaluation of the MMRCA contenders, the new competition should take less time.
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