Deccan Chronicle

CAG’s Rafale report raises many questions

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The report of the Comptrolle­r and Auditor-General (CAG) on the purchase of Rafale fighter jets from France — which has become a matter of deep controvers­y — doesn’t provide satisfacti­on on points of discord. There can be little doubt that the CAG will need to expand its present effort to be more comprehens­ive if its work is to carry conviction. This should ideally happen before the next Parliament has a chance to debate its report. The report, presented to Parliament on Wednesday, fails to shed light on some key questions, first raised by Congress president Rahul Gandhi, who made serious allegation­s that were amplified by carefully documented and well-sourced reports in the media along with defence ministry documents.

The CAG report makes two principal assertions. The first is that the price contracted by the present government to buy 36 Rafale jets is 2.86 per cent cheaper than that negotiated to buy 136 of the same aircraft by the UPA government earlier. The basis for the calculatio­n is not presented as the CAG has excised the price data. However, a media report by a credible defence analyst relying on sources involved in the negotiatio­ns suggests the price offered by Dassault Aviation in 2016 for 36 aircraft was 40 per cent higher than its offer in 2012 for 126 aircraft. The package cost was 19.5 billion euros in 2012, and this included the cost of aircraft, technology transfer (to HAL, the then Indian partner), India-specific enhancemen­ts, weapons systems on board, spares and maintenanc­e guarantees. This works out to `1,000 crores per aircraft. In contrast, the 2016 price was `1,600 crores per aircraft.

The second key point made by the CAG is that the delivery schedule offered in 2016 was five months quicker than the one proposed in 2012. For scrapping the UPA-era negotiatio­ns and signing a fresh contract by jettisonin­g HAL and introducin­g a practicall­y-bankrupt Indian businessma­n into the proceeding­s, the Narendra Modi government cited the reasons of better price and faster delivery (to bolster security needs). But the CAG itself casts doubts on the government’s claimed five-month time advantage. It also criticises the government for not going for a fixed price formula, a point also made in a strong dissent note by the three “domain experts” in the Indian negotiatin­g team, and accepting the French formula of price escalation instead. To be comprehens­ive, the CAG should have referenced the dissent note, which carries multi-dimensiona­l insights. The CAG report will also be found wanting for not alluding to the gross violation of Defence Purchase Procedure 2013 and 2016, which resulted in the PMO conducting “parallel negotiatio­ns”, undercutti­ng the official Indian negotiator­s, a point made by the then defence secretary in a note to then defence minister Manohar Parrkiar, allowing scope for possible legal action.

The CAG criticises the government for not going for a fixed price formula, a point made in a dissent note by the three experts in the Indian negotiatin­g team, and accepting the French price escalation formula instead

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