Defence minister AK Antony announced shortly after his government’s preference for Dassault was revealed that contracts would certainly not be signed during this financial year (which ends 31 March 2012). But barring any shock acceptance of Eurofighter’s revised offer, Dassault will begin delivering 18 off-the-shelf Rafales in 2015, while Indian aerospace firm Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) will start delivering the remaining 108 aircraft, which it is building locally under licence, in 2017.
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The Ministry of Defence (MoD) will be reluctant to court controversy by overturning its decision to acquire the Rafale given the problems it is experiencing with another IAF procurement programme. The IAF selected the Swiss Pilatus PC-7 Mk II turboprop trainer to fulfil an urgent requirement for new trainer aircraft in mid-2011. However, Korean Aerospace Industries (KAI), which offered its KT-1 trainer in competition, decided in February 2012 to file a complaint about procurement irregularities. The Pilatus deal now faces delays, which is a huge headache for an air force that is desperate to update its ageing and accident-prone trainer fleet.
In other significant procurement news, Russia agreed to supply the IAF with 42 Sukhoi Su-30 MKI fighter aircraft, in addition to the 230 that India has already ordered. The deal was signed during Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s visit to Moscow in December 2011. Russia remains one of India’s key defence suppliers: it is also currently upgrading the Indian Navy (IN)’s fleet of Tupolev Tu-14 Bear maritime patrol aircraft; it delivered the refurbished nuclear attack submarine INS Chakra to the IN in January; it is continuing retrofit work on the aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya, with delivery now due in late 2012; and it is also conducting upgrade work on the IN’s three Talwar-class frigates to equip them with the joint Indian-Russian BrahMos cruise missile. In February New Delhi and Moscow also announced that their Indra joint military exercise – which was cancelled without any public explanation in 2011 – would resume in 2012.
While also preparing to hold joint military exercises with China in 2012, India agreed with the Chinese side to establish a ‘working mechanism’ to deal with incidents along the two countries’ disputed border. The mechanism does not seek to help resolve the border dispute, though it should reduce the likelihood of localised confrontations between Chinese and Indian troops escalating into a wider conflict. The Indian army chief General VK Singh visited Myanmar in January, as India seeks to upgrade its strategic relationship with the country. Myanmar is understood to be keen to boost its ties with India to avoid falling too firmly under China’s strategic influence, and India is similarly minded to restrict Chinese influence in its neighbourhood.