Could have built Rafale jets in India, says HAL ex-chief
NEWDELHI: State-run plane maker Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) could have built Rafale fighters in India had the government managed to close the original negotiations with Dassault and had actually signed a workshare contract with the French company, said T Suvarna Raju, who was heading HAL till three weeks ago. He questioned why the Union government was not putting out the files in public. He admitted that HAL may not have been able to build the planes at the desired “cost-perpiece”, one of the reasons why that deal fell through, but insisted that the company has the ability to make advanced fighters.
A former air chief, however, said making the Rafale would have been a challenge for the public sector undertaking. “When HAL can build a 25-tonne Sukhoi-30, a fourthgeneration fighter jet that forms the mainstay of the air force, from raw material stage, then what are we talking about? We could have definitely done it (licence produced the Rafale jets),” said Raju, who retired on September 1.
This is the first time anyone from the state-owned aircraft maker has publicly commented on the questions around the deal. His comments come even as the politics around the Rafale deal shows no signs of dying down. The government and the Congress have been trading charges over the controversial ₹59,000-crore purchase almost every day.
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