Hindustan Times (Patiala)

India’s LCA jets better than China-Pak’s JF-17: IAF chief

With its advanced weapons and sensors, the LCA Mk-1A jet will have good strike capability: Bhadauria

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Indian Air Force (IAF) chief Air Chief Marshal RKS Bhadauria on Thursday said that the soon-to-be ordered LCA (light combat aircraft) Mk-1A jets would be way ahead of the JF-17 fighter planes operated by the Pakistan Air Force. The JF-17 has been jointly developed by China and Pakistan.

With its advanced weapons and sensors, the LCA Mk-1A jets will have good strike capability, he told news channels a day after India’s Cabinet Committee on Security, headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, approved a ₹48,000-crore proposal to buy 83 advanced jets to bolster the IAF’s combat potential,

“There is no comparison with the JF-17,” he said.

The air chief added that even the existing final operationa­l clearance (FOC) variant of the LCA was superior to the JF-17. He said the LCA Mk-1 jets would be equipped with the indigenous Astra beyond-visual-range missiles.

The CCS approval came 10 months after the ministry gave the green light to the purchase of 83 Mk-1A jets from stateowned plane maker Hindustan Aeronautic­s Limited (HAL).

The aircraft to be ordered include 73 Mk-1A fighter jets and 10 LCA Mk-1 trainer aircraft. HAL is expected to deliver the first Mk-1A jet to the IAF three years after the deal is signed, with all the aircraft likely to be delivered by 2028-29.

The Mk-1A programme is expected to generate thousands of jobs and will involve the participat­ion of more than 500 Indian companies.

The deal for the 83 Mk-1A jets will take the total number of Tejas variants ordered to 123. The 40 LCAs already ordered by the IAF are in the initial operationa­l clearance (IOC) and the more advanced FOC configurat­ions.

The LCA Mk-1A will come with additional improvemen­ts over the FOC aircraft, making it the most advanced Tejas variant so far, as previously reported by Hindustan Times.

Meanwhile, Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on (DRDO) chief Dr G Satheesh Reddy said that the deal would pave the way for developing various advanced aircraft systems in India. “Getting approval for the order of the largest quantity of aircraft ever is a big achievemen­t and is the culminatio­n of hard work of three decades. It paves way for the developmen­t of various advanced aircraft systems in the country,” he told ANI.

 ?? REUTERS ?? LCA Tejas during the Indian Air Force Day celebratio­ns at the Hindon Air Force Station in New Delhi last year.
REUTERS LCA Tejas during the Indian Air Force Day celebratio­ns at the Hindon Air Force Station in New Delhi last year.

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