(Reuters) - India's air force risks a major capability gap opening up with China and Pakistan without new western warplanes or if local defense contractors can't produce what the military needs in a timely manner. A 2012 agreement to buy 126
Rafale fighters from France's Dassault Aviation has stalled due to a
dispute over the assembly of the aircraft in India. India's
first homegrown fighter, the Tejas light combat aircraft, will finally
be delivered next month, 30 years after it was conceived. But senior air
force officers privately said they were unimpressed, with one former
officer, an ex-fighter pilot, saying the plane was "so late it is
obsolete". While the navy is undergoing an accelerated modernization drive, experts said India
was vulnerable in the skies because of its reliance on a disparate fleet
of aging Russian-made MiG and French Mirage fighters, along with more
modern Russian Sukhoi Su-30s. Half of India's fighters are due to retire
beginning this year until 2024. "It
could lead to humiliation at the hands of our neighbors," AK Sachdev, a
retired air force officer, wrote last year in the Indian Defence Review
journal. A coordinated attack by China and arch-rival Pakistan
could stretch the Indian military, he added. It's a scenario defense
strategists in New Delhi have been asked to plan for, Indian air force
sources say, although experts say such an event is highly unlikely to
happen. India's ties with China are
still hamstrung by a dispute over their Himalayan border that led to
war in 1962. New Delhi is also wary of China's expanding naval presence
in the Indian Ocean and its close relations with Pakistan. MULTIPLE CRASHES India's
air force has 34 operational squadrons, down from 39 earlier this
decade and below the government approved strength of 42, a parliamentary
committee said in December. More than half of India's MiGs have crashed in recent decades, the then defense minister said in 2012. At the same time, China is flying locally built fourth-generation J-10 fighters and is testing two fifth-generation stealth fighter jets. Pakistan is upgrading its Lockheed Martin F-16 fighters as well as using JF-17 warplanes developed with China. It is also in talks to buy J-10s, according to Pakistani and Chinese industry sources. India would still win a war against Pakistan
because of the sheer size of its air force, but the slow
modernization means victory would come with heavy casualties, said
Richard Aboulafia, Washington D.C.-based vice president of analysis at
the Teal Group, an aerospace and defense think tank. To keep up, India is buying more Su-30s and upgrading other existing fighters. "We do need to increase our defense preparedness," Prime Minister Narendra Modi told the opening ceremony of the Aero India airshow in the city of Bengaluru on Wednesday. Criticism
of the Tejas was unfounded, said K. Tamilmani, a senior official at the
Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), a defense
ministry agency which designed and developed the plane. "The
Tejas has a safety record that is unbeaten," Tamilmani told Reuters by
telephone, adding it would provide a platform to develop more advanced
fighters in the years ahead. IMPASSE OVER RAFALE JETS The Rafale fighters are expected to replace some of India's MiGs and Mirage jets. But India
is insisting Dassault take full responsibility for production of the
aircraft at a state-run facility in Bengaluru, Indian defense ministry
officials have said. France has
said it will help Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd stick to delivery schedules,
but that it cannot give guarantees for production of the aircraft made
at a facility over which it has no administrative or expert control. India
would decide on the fate of the deal only after March, when a defense
ministry committee delivers a report on the issue, Defence Minister
Manohar Parrikar said at the airshow. Cancellation
would be "disastrous", said Deba Mohanty, chairman at Indicia Research
& Advisory, a New Delhi-based defense consulting firm. "It's
a really tricky situation in which the supplier is unhappy, the
bureaucrats are unhappy and the end user is disappointed," said Mohanty. India
has successfully introduced Boeing's C-17 cargo plane and P-8 Poseidon
anti-submarine aircraft and Lockheed Martin's C-130J transport, all
bought directly, over the last few years. That shows off-the shelf solutions work best, experts said. However, under the Modi administration's "Make in India"
program, there is an emphasis on building a domestic defense industrial
base to cut dependence on foreign supplies that have made India the world's biggest arms importer. The
DRDO for example is working on the Tejas Mark II, a slightly larger
plane than the original, which will feature more powerful engines,
better radars and upgraded avionics. Local trainer jets, light transport aircraft and helicopter programs are also under way. "People
who fly planes want the best value for money, which means
off-the-shelf," said Aboulafia. "People who want jobs and technology
development schemes have different priorities. That's why the two groups
don't like each other much."
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