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Indian Defence Minister Resisting U.S. Lobbying on $ 10 bn Fighter Aircraft Deal
ndias defence minister A.K.Antony is reported to be resisting American attempts to use an Indo-U.S. Strategic dialogue as a lobbying point to sell American warplanes in the $10 billion MMRCA deal.
A high power visit by the US secretary of state Hillary Clinton has been cancelled because Antony indicated unavailability to meet with top American officials including Secretary of Defence, Robert Gates.
According to a report in an Indian newspaper, The telegraph, Clintons visit, which was to have been built around a second round of the Indo-US strategic dialogue, has been in the making for more than six months. But the Indian government requested postponement of the dialogue which was to begin on April 6 in New Delhi, but offered the excuse of the state elections in India and ongoing developments in West Asia and North Africa for the delay.
Two U.S. companies, Lockheed Martin and Boeing are bidding along with four others in one of the biggest fighter procurement deals in history.
The report speculated that the postponement became inevitable after Antony refused to meet US defence secretary Robert Gates who wanted to travel with Clinton to India. Gates was not part of the first round of the strategic talks and his inclusion was suspected to make a pitch for American defence sales to India.
In recent days, the U.S. has increased its sales pitch on the MMRCA deal.
The U.S. Ambassador to India, Timothy J Roemer said during a business gathering, "hopefully the next step (in Indo-U.S. relations) will be as India evaluates the Medium-Multi Role Combat aircraft deal... that they will decide to pick one of the US aircraft, the F-16 Super Viper ( Lockheed Martin ) or the F/A-18 ( Boeing ). This becomes the very logical next step in the relationship. This will be a very important indicator of where this relationship goes in the 21st century," the US Ambassador said while addressing a conference in New Delhi on 'America and Asia-Perspectives on Peace, Security and Development.
What the Ambassador said is being echoed openly by several American defence companies executives that it is payback time for India in exchange for the international support the U.S. has provided for its civil nuclear program and its claim for a place in the U.N. Security Council besides taking two Indian government organizations off the U.S. restricted entities list.
http://www.defenseworld.net/go/defensenews.jsp?id=5533&h=Indian%20Defence%20Minister%20Resisting%20%20U.S.%20Lobbying%20on%20$%2010%20bn%20Fighter%20Aircraft%20Deal
ndias defence minister A.K.Antony is reported to be resisting American attempts to use an Indo-U.S. Strategic dialogue as a lobbying point to sell American warplanes in the $10 billion MMRCA deal.
A high power visit by the US secretary of state Hillary Clinton has been cancelled because Antony indicated unavailability to meet with top American officials including Secretary of Defence, Robert Gates.
According to a report in an Indian newspaper, The telegraph, Clintons visit, which was to have been built around a second round of the Indo-US strategic dialogue, has been in the making for more than six months. But the Indian government requested postponement of the dialogue which was to begin on April 6 in New Delhi, but offered the excuse of the state elections in India and ongoing developments in West Asia and North Africa for the delay.
Two U.S. companies, Lockheed Martin and Boeing are bidding along with four others in one of the biggest fighter procurement deals in history.
The report speculated that the postponement became inevitable after Antony refused to meet US defence secretary Robert Gates who wanted to travel with Clinton to India. Gates was not part of the first round of the strategic talks and his inclusion was suspected to make a pitch for American defence sales to India.
In recent days, the U.S. has increased its sales pitch on the MMRCA deal.
The U.S. Ambassador to India, Timothy J Roemer said during a business gathering, "hopefully the next step (in Indo-U.S. relations) will be as India evaluates the Medium-Multi Role Combat aircraft deal... that they will decide to pick one of the US aircraft, the F-16 Super Viper ( Lockheed Martin ) or the F/A-18 ( Boeing ). This becomes the very logical next step in the relationship. This will be a very important indicator of where this relationship goes in the 21st century," the US Ambassador said while addressing a conference in New Delhi on 'America and Asia-Perspectives on Peace, Security and Development.
What the Ambassador said is being echoed openly by several American defence companies executives that it is payback time for India in exchange for the international support the U.S. has provided for its civil nuclear program and its claim for a place in the U.N. Security Council besides taking two Indian government organizations off the U.S. restricted entities list.
http://www.defenseworld.net/go/defensenews.jsp?id=5533&h=Indian%20Defence%20Minister%20Resisting%20%20U.S.%20Lobbying%20on%20$%2010%20bn%20Fighter%20Aircraft%20Deal