Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘No sovereign guarantee with Russia in S-400 deal’

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE S-400 DEAL WAS INKED BY INDIA WITH RUSSIA IN OCTOBER LAST YEAR TO PROCURE A BATCH OF THE MISSILE SYSTEMS AT A COST OF ~40,000 CRORE

NEW DELHI: India’s S-400 missile defence system deal with Russia doesn’t have a sovereign guarantee as the process of inter-government agreements with countries like Russia and the US are already “streamline­d”, top IAF officers said on Tuesday.

The statement comes at a time when a political controvers­y has erupted over a media report about Indian government having made concession­s by allegedly dropping some key clauses relating to anti-corruption penalties and sovereign guarantee in the controvers­y-hit Rafale fighter jet deal with France.

While opposition parties have raised questions about such clauses having been dropped, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the government have rejected corruption allegation­s. Replying to a question here during a press interactio­n on the IAF’S fire power demonstrat­ion Vayu Shakti 2019 at Phokran ranges later this week, Air Marshal V R Chaudhari, Deputy Chief of the Air Staff, said, “there is no sovereign guarantee in the S-400 deal with Russia.” IAF’S Vice Chief Air Marshal Anil Khosla said, “We have had a lot of acquisitio­ns from Russians and Americans earlier.” “The process of the government-to-government agreement with Russia and America are generally already streamline­d, or should I say evolved. With other countries, it may not have evolved, as the government-togovernme­nt (agreement)... may have been the first or just initiated,” he said. The Hindu newspaper had reported on Monday that the multi-billion dollar Rafale deal saw critical provisions relating to anti-corruption penalties, sovereign guarantees and making payments through an escrow account being dropped days before the signing of the inter-government­al agreement (IGA) in 2016.

The S-400 deal was inked by India with Russia in October last year to procure a batch of the missile systems at a cost of ~40,000 crore. India went ahead to seal the deal despite sanction warnings from the US.

Russia in January had said there will be no delays in delivery of the S-400 air defence systems to India and a payment mechanism for the deal is being worked out Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, during his India visit had said the missile systems will significan­tly enhance India’s air defence capability. The Union government had informed Lok Sabha earlier this year that it will start receiving the missile systems from Russia from October 2020 and the deliveries will be completed by April 2023

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