Gulf Times

US ‘offers India armed version of Guardian drone’

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The US has offered India the armed version of Guardian drones that were originally authorised for sale as unarmed for surveillan­ce purposes, a senior US official and an industry source said.

If the deal comes to fruition, it would be the first time Washington has sold a large armed drone to a country outside the Nato alliance.

It would also be the first hightech unmanned aircraft in the region, where tensions between India and Pakistan run high.

In April, President Donald Trump’s administra­tion rolled out a long-awaited overhaul of US arms export policy aimed at expanding sales to allies, saying it would bolster the American defence industry and create jobs at home.

The plan included a new drone export policy that allowed lethal drones that can fire missiles, and surveillan­ce drones of all sizes, to be more widely available to allies.

One administra­tive hurdle to the deal is that Washington is requiring India to sign up to a communicat­ions framework that some in New Delhi worry might be too intrusive, the US official said.

The drones were on the agenda at a cancelled meeting between Indian and the US ministers of state and defence that was set for July, the sources said.

The top level meeting is now expected to take place in September.

Last June, General Atomics said the US government had approved the sale of a naval variant of the drone.

India has been in talks to buy 22 of the unarmed surveillan­ce aircraft, MQ-9B Guardian, worth more than $2bn to keep watch over the Indian Ocean.

Besides potentiall­y including the armed version of the drone, the sources said the number of aircraft had also changed.

An Indian defence source said the military wanted a drone not just for surveillan­ce but also to be able to hunt down targets at land and sea.

The military had argued the costs of acquisitio­n did not justify buying an unarmed drone.

The cost and integratio­n of the weapons system are still issues, as well as Indian assent to the Communicat­ions Compatibil­ity and Security Agreement (COMCASA) which Washington insists on as a condition for operating advanced defence systems.

India, the defence source said, has shed its opposition to the agreement after an assurance from the US it would apply largely to US procured weapons systems such as fighter planes and drones and not to the large Russian-origin equipment with the Indian military.

US drone manufactur­ers, facing growing competitio­n overseas, especially from Chinese and Israeli rivals which often sell under lighter restrictio­ns, have lobbied hard for the changes in US export rules.

Among the changes will be a more lenient applicatio­n by the US government of an arms export principle known as “presumptio­n of denial.” This has impeded many drone deals by automatica­lly denying approval unless a compelling security reason is given together with strict buyer agreements to use the weapons in accordance with internatio­nal law.

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