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Ajai Shukla: Where is India's light fighter?

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Ajai Shukla / Feb 07, 2012, 00:15 IST

Kudos to the government for selecting a fighter aircraft for a depleted Indian Air Force (IAF), which currently fields barely 34 fighter squadrons (21 aircraft per squadron) against an assessed requirement of 45. While zeroing in on the French Rafale, New Delhi has said “no thanks” to arms supply heavyweights whose political and technological clout often bludgeons procurement decisions in their favour. This was helped, admittedly, by India’s ability to soothe the losers with alternative largesse — Washington with contracts for transport and maritime aircraft; Moscow with deals for helicopters, fighters and warships; London with trainer jets; and Stockholm with the hope of mammoth deals for artillery guns and conventional submarines. But that should not detract from the IAF’s credit for running a fair, transparent and relatively quick contest in which, for the first time in India, a detailed “life cycle” evaluation looked beyond the fighter’s ticker price to the cost of operating it through a service life of four decades.

The difficulty in conducting such an exercise is illustrated in Brazil, where competing pulls and pressures have stymied a simpler decision between the Boeing F/A-18, the Rafale and the Gripen NG fighters.


India’s decision stemmed from Defence Minister A K Antony’s insistence on letting the IAF determine which aircraft best met its needs. But, sadly, this unwise reliance on the views of fighter pilots alone has twisted the rationale for buying a fighter. Instead of the cheap, single-engine, light fighter that the IAF set out to buy in the 1990s to replace India’s ageing MiG-21 fleet, the IAF will have 126 heavy, twin-engine and enormously expensive Rafales.

These six squadrons of Rafales could go up to nine squadrons through a follow-on order, say IAF planners. Add to those 12 squadrons of the Sukhoi-30MKI and another 12 squadrons of the fifth-generation fighter aircraft (FGFA) that India is co-developing with Russia, and the IAF will field 33 squadrons of heavy, high-performance fighters by 2022 — 75 per cent of its 45-squadron fighter fleet. This might gladden the heart of a young fighter pilot, just as a fleet of Ferraris would gladden the heart of a college-going youngster, even if his commute were two kilometres through crowded traffic. But it is worrisome to a defence planner who seeks a balanced force for performing a multitude of tasks economically.

Light fighters are affordable, and cheaper to buy and to fly. Being smaller, they are inherently more stealthy, less observable on enemy radars. A top-class light fighter is one-third the cost of a Rafale. Even though the Rafale is a powerful, high-quality brute of a combat machine, it will almost always lose in a contest with three modern light fighters. “Quality is fine,” said Stalin, always the pragmatist; “but quantity has a quality of its own.”

That is why the USAF and the Israeli air forces have large fleets of single-engine F-16 fighters. That is also the logic for India’s MiG-21 fleet and for the Tejas Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) that will replace it. In the late 1990s, whilst justifying the procurement of fighters from abroad, the IAF cited delays in the Tejas programme and suggested that the Mirage-2000 production line be bought from Dassault, and the single-engine fighter be built in India. But when the ministry of defence (MoD), still smarting from the Tehelka exposes, insisted on a multi-vendor global tender, the IAF reframed its requirements. The term became MMRCA (medium multi-role combat aircraft) and the specifications favoured a twin-engine, heavy fighter. Astonishingly, nobody in the MoD seemed to notice the turnabout or object to the contradiction.

Today, India’s light fighter hangars are emptying fast with replacements lagging. By 2013-14, seven squadrons of MiG-21s must retire; another six squadrons will be phased out by 2017, as will four squadrons of MiG-27s. It is vital, therefore, to drive home the indigenous Tejas programme, committing the money, resources and organisational effort needed for developing and manufacturing at least 10-12 squadrons of progressively improved Tejas light fighters.

Compared to the estimated Rs 75,000 crore for just 126 Rafale, the Tejas’ budget has been a pittance. Since 1983, Rs 9,690 crore has gone into aerospace infrastructure – R&D laboratories, defence factories, private industry, academic institutions, and a world-class test facility, the National Flight Testing Centre (NFTC) – and into building and flight-testing some 20 Tejas prototypes. An additional Rs 4,353 crore are earmarked for the Tejas Mark II. Boosted allocations must now expand R&D facilities and up-skill the manpower that drives the Tejas programme.

Simultaneously, a world-class Tejas assembly facility must be built, incorporating the manufacturing practices and quality control measures that characterise aircraft production worldwide. Currently, Tejas manufacture is the responsibility of Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL), which has been without a CEO since Ashok Nayak retired last October. With HAL’s focus on ongoing production lines like the Sukhoi-30MKI, Tejas assembly is hardly a priority. Nor is there emphasis on reducing manufacturing cost, which is currently too high at Rs 180-200 crore ($36-40 million) per Tejas Mark I. That must be brought down to Rs 125-150 crore ($25-30 million) to make the LCA a compelling buy on the international market. Export orders would allow scale manufacturing, driving down prices further.

Paying Rs 75,000 crore for the Rafale will indeed boost national defence. But a far smaller expenditure on the Indian aerospace establishment, and the squeezing of key technologies from Dassault and Thales during contract negotiations, will ensure that the Rafale is the last fighter that India buys abroad.


Ajai Shukla: Where is India's light fighter?
 
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This article speaks the truth.

Imagine if the government bought the mirage line.....

Then again, imagine how much India would be charged to upgrade all those mirages.....


As for the LCA, its so late in coming it might as well be used as a tech demonstrator, maybe more Rafales and Sukhois can be bought off the shelf to make up the Gap, since HAL cant meet demand.
 
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I have heard this guy batting for f35 after rafale was declared winner. I think he was wrong on most parts. I dont trust him to be balanced.
 
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I have heard this guy batting for f35 after rafale was declared winner. I think he was wrong on most parts. I dont trust him to be balanced.


Do you know the reasoning for the F 35....its 5th gen...we are inducting a 4th gen aircraft while China has a 5th gen platform. F35 worked out cheaper then both Euro craft....and the US made it a point to supply asap. Also, its serves a btter purpose to align with the US with the Chinese threat.
 
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I have stopped reading Ajai Shukla's blog long ago. He is extremely pro American and often irrationally so in his peddling of the f-35.I have no problem with some one being pro American but it should not be based of irrational and faulty logic. Every one knows that the initial IOC for the F-35A has not been planned before 2017/2018. The first operational F-35 will not be inducted before 2020 and then begins the wait for the Indian F-35s to begin arriving after the orders for UK, Japan, Australia etc have been met. So 2022/2023 at the earliest. That is if the problems with the design, range, shooting developmental cost and other outstanding issues are resolved satisfactorily. Can we wait till 2022/2023? What happens to our fighter strength by then without quick replacements. The FGFA will be arriving by 2020. Why do we need two hyper expensive stealth fighters?

Yes we do need light, singled engine fighters. So let us get the Tejas up and running. I don't see any other alternative. Yes quantity has its merits. But going by Ajai's logic of 3:1 being a favourable ratio for low end light fighters to overwhelm our fleet of 33 double engined high end fighters, the adversary needs 99 squadrons of lightweight and cheap fighters to overwhelm the IAF. Which adversary air force fields or will field 99 squadrons in the near future?
 
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This is a good one from him.
I agree LCA has its own place and quantity does matter....

Look at how really cheap LCA R and D has been.
 
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we should have procured the Mirage-2000 production line as a interim way to retire all MiG-21's and we should have put full effort and funds into LCAMK2 but whatever we are getting Rafale now and god willing LCA MK2 before 2020.
 
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Ajay shukla is sessionable person sometimes he wrote good articles but sometimes it was bad......
But Indeed It was a good article...:tup:
 
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usually Ajay Shukla favors US or F35 but today he made a exception God knows why....
but to be frank he is correct we should let Tejas to join our ranks without delay.....
 
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Thats an excellent article by Ajai Shukla. We need to ramp up Tejas production NOW lest it becomes irrelevant in a decade or so
 
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Thats an excellent article by Ajai Shukla. We need to ramp up Tejas production NOW lest it becomes irrelevant in a decade or so

thats just the problem the LCAMK1 is quite rudimentary right now it fails to meet even the relaxed IAF standards for IOC, we need to get the MK1 on par with IAF req's then focus on MK2 and get it with in user service before 2018

the IAF plans to induct ~200LCA's a squadron or 2 being LCA MK1 (most likely used as a lead in trainer for the MK2) and the rest being MK2's.
 
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