Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

IAF may buy 300 indigenous basic trainers, fighters

- Sudhi Ranjan Sen • sudhi.sen@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The Indian Air Force (IAF) has told the government that “it is committed” to buying nearly 300 indigenous­ly made fighters and basic trainers from the state-owned Hindustan Aeronautic­s Limited (HAL), a senior defence ministry official said on condition of anonymity. The deal will likely cost the government several billion dollars.

IAF’s commitment , however, comes with a rider: designing, manufactur­ing and delivery will have to be within a prescribed deadline from the time the deal is inked, this person added. “Aeronautic­al Developmen­t Agency (ADA) and the HAL must get their act together,” the official said. ADA works under the Department of Defence Research and developmen­t of the ministry of defence and is tasked with overseeing India’s LCA (light combat aircraft) programme.

IAF has told the government that it is “committed to buying” another 10 Squadrons of Tejas Mark-II (each squadron has 16-18 fighters) and 36 Advance Medium Combat (AMCA) fighters. Besides the fighters, IAF has also told the government that it will buy newly made trainer aircraft HTTP-40 as well. The decision to commit to buying indigenous fighters is the first major decision taken by Air Marshal RK Singh Bhadauria who took over as the Chief of Air Staff recently.

IAF has already bought 40 fighters of the initial version of

Tejas. “The final contract for the purchase of 83 indigenous­ly made Tejas Mark-1 fighters will be signed by the end of the current financial. Negotiatio­ns between the IAF and HAL is in the final stages,” a second official in the ministry of defence said.

After several time over-run, the HAL has delivered about a dozen aircraft and fallen behind the scheduled yearly production target. The IAF was forced to raise the first squadron of Tejas fighters with just three in 2016.

The designing for the AMCA, which will have stealth capabiliti­es, and advanced radar and weapon packages, is in the nascent stage and will be India’s own next-generation fighter aircraft. The design of the Tejas Mark-II is in a very advanced stage and is likely to frozen yet soon,” the second official said. “The Indian private defence manufactur­ing sector should also try to exploit this opportunit­y along with the Defence Public Sector Units.”

IAF needs a minimum of 42 fighter squadrons to put up a credible deterrence along two borders simultaneo­usly. It, currently has only 30 fighter squadrons. The decision to go with indigenous­ly made fighters is a major leap of faith for IAF which has been accused in the past of preferring foreign-made fighters to indigenous technology.

“Production facilities of LCA, Tejas are being upgraded. As and when orders firmed up more effort will be made to ramp-up production,” a HAL spokespers­on reacting to the rider of IAF.

 ?? AFP FILE ?? • The 'Tejas’ LCA flies on a sortie at HAL Airport in Bangalore.
AFP FILE • The 'Tejas’ LCA flies on a sortie at HAL Airport in Bangalore.

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