Deccan Chronicle

NDA RAFALE DEAL COST 2.86% LESS

There was scope to save even more under the India-specific enhancemen­ts, says CAG

- PAWAN BALI | DC

The Comptrolle­r and Auditor General said on Wednesday in a muchantici­pated report that the $8.7 billion deal signed by Narendra Modi government with France to buy 36 Rafale fighter jets from Dassault Aviation was 2.86 per cent cheaper than what had been negotiated by the previous UPA government in 2007. However, it outlined various measures which would have made the deal even further cheaper.

The CAG report on “Capital Acquisitio­n in the Indian Air Force” tabled in Parliament said that most of these savings were only because the Indian Air Force changed the missile system in 2015 from what it wanted in 2007.

This saved 17 per cent in the India-specific enhancemen­t cost of the Rafale jets.

However, there was scope to save even more under the India-specific enhancemen­ts (to make the fighters compatible with special requiremen­ts of the Indian Air Force) because the Indian negotiatio­n team had proposed to postpone six enhancemen­ts for future aircraft, which were shot down by the defence ministry.

The CAG said four of these enhancemen­ts were “not required in the technical and staff evaluation­s” and constitute­d 14 per cent of the India-specific enhancemen­t cost.

Also, the weapons package offered in the new deal was 1.05 per cent cheaper.

The price of the basic aircraft was the same during the NDA and UPA eras, the CAG said.

The CAG said on Wednesday that the $8.7 billion deal signed by the BJP government with France to buy 36 Rafale fighter jets from Dassault Aviation was 2.86 per cent cheaper than what had been negotiated by the UPA government in 2007.

Without disclosing the pricing details in absolute terms, the CAG found overall that the price of seven items were higher than the UPA one, three were the same and four were lower.

It did not agree with the defence ministry’s argument that the basic aircraft cost was nine per cent cheaper than the price offered for the aircraft in 2007.

The areas where the price overshot than that negotiated under the UPA was the engineerin­g support package and the performanc­e-based logistics for the IAF, where the price was higher by 6.54 per cent. The training costs also shot up by 2.68 per cent over the 2007 offer.

The CAG found removal of financial and performanc­e guarantees in the 2015 agreements resulted in savings to Dassault, which should have been passed on to the Indian government. In the 2007 offer, Dassault provided financial and performanc­e guarantees, the cost of which was embedded in the offer price, the CAG said. But these were removed in the agreement signed by the NDA.

The CAG underlined that the NDA government agreed with the refusal of the French side to provide a “sovereign guarantee” and instead accepted a “Letter of Comfort”. The French also did not agree to the Indian government’s request for opening of an escrow account to manage payments to Dassault as a safeguard measure.

The CAG said the only concession which the Indian government got was “that the advance payments were to be made directly to the bank accounts of Dassault that were opened in a French government-controlled bank, over which the French party was to exercise control and monitoring for effective implementa­tion of the intergover­nment agreement and the supply protocols”.

In case of any breach of agreement, the Indian government would have to first settle it through arbitratio­n directly with Dassault.

If the arbitratio­n award were in favour of the Indian party and Dassault failed to honour the award, the Indian party should exhaust all available legal remedies.

 ?? — PTI ?? Congress President Rahul Gandhi, former prime minister Manmohan Singh, former party president Sonia Gandhi and other party leaders during a protest over the Rafale deal at Parliament in New Delhi on Wednesday.
— PTI Congress President Rahul Gandhi, former prime minister Manmohan Singh, former party president Sonia Gandhi and other party leaders during a protest over the Rafale deal at Parliament in New Delhi on Wednesday.

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