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sancho : This is yet another naval officer who is expressing keenness to see the NLCA in service soon. He says the navy has "grand plans" for the N-LCA. Earlier a senior naval officer had remarked that the navy is eagerly awaiting the LCA, more so than any foreign fighter. Contrary to your assertion that it is a useless endeavor, and that it will not serve any purpose for the navy, the navy seems to think otherwise.
Actually it fits pretty well to my point of view of N-LCA and INs intentions, since they want it only based on indigenous purposes, with the aim to improve the naval fighter development in India, not based on capability, or suitability for our coming threats and to be honest, that one liner statement hardly has any value compared to this:
"LCA-Navy Not What We Want, But It's Ours": FONA
"It may not be what we want, but it is our own aircraft," says the Indian Navy's Flag Officer Naval Aviation (FONA) Rear Admiral Sudhir Pillai on the LCA Navy in an interview to FORCE magazine. He was asked how effective the LCA Navy would be for a carrier-based role given that it "only an eight ton platform". The officer's response: "I wish wish we could straightaway develop a Rafale. But seriously, we have to look at the Indian Navy and it commitment towards indigenisation. I agree that we have made a modest start, but it has been a huge learning experience. LCA Navy will remain a modest platform with an uprated engine which will give us adequate capability at sea. While it is easy to buy from abroad, sometimes it is extremely difficult to support those platforms. Our past experiences tell us that it is worth committing resources to develop our own assets."
Livefist: "LCA-Navy Not What We Want, But It's Ours": FONA
Again, IN knows pretty well that N-LCA is not a good carrier fighter, but their aim is to set up a naval fighter development base in India, just like LCA was based to set up a general fighter development base in India. In both cases, LCA will play only a minor role in the force, since both forces will operate more capable fighters too. The difference however is, that the operational situation for a single engine light class fighter is very different in IAF, than in IN and that makes is such a bad choice as a fully fledged carrier fighter version. Anything more that the current N-LCA MK1 tech demonstrator is a waste, since we get the necessary design and development experience and know how with this demonstrator. The operational side however should have been covered with higher numbers of more capable fighters!
(Of course, capability-wise the NLCA is not as capable as other carrier borne fighters available in the international market. I am not disputing that. But it is several times more capable than anything the navy has flown so far from its carriers. And the fact that it is indigenous confers a lot of benefits in itself, which the navy seems to have realized. They are going to plan their doctrine around what is available to them, foreign and Indian included, which in the long run will benefit them and the nation more. As this officer is saying, they have "grand plans" for the LCA.)
Whenever I discuss N-LCA with others, these 2 points will be shown as arguments for the fighter, better than the Harrier and it's indigenous. But I am kind of surprised to hear them from you, since these are just excuses to justify N-LCAs.
Comparing it with old generation fighters that we have operated in the past or till now, doesn't make any sense! Even the Harrier is many times more capable than the carrier fighters we had before them, but that that doesn't make it useful in attacking Pakistan shore bases against JF 17 or F16s and coastal air defences right? Nor will it have any chance to stand against J15, let alone a J31. But these are the important points, what roles is N-LCA intended to do and against what possible threats?
We (including IN) are still blinding our self with the term indigenous, ignoring that it's simply nuts to operate a single engine light class carrier fighter by 2022 (since N-LCA won't be operational earlier), against the capabilities of Pakistan and China by then. Even the Mig 29K will offer only limited potential, without credible upgrades, but no matter what, the future of IN must be a 5th gen fighter!
That's why a naval AMCA development would be so important for us, but ADA/DRDO as usual don't see the real requirements and IN is happy to get any chance of an own development (which is N-LCA), even if it is a bad one!
Btw, what benefits do we have from N-LCA being indigenous?
At this point we can say, that N-LCA and Mig 29K will both have foreign engines, IF the indigenous AESA will be ready by 2022, it must be integrated into the Mig too, the weapon package by then will be the same either:
R73
Astra
Sudarshan LGB with Litening LDP
Kh 35 anti ship missiles
While the Mig might even have Brahmos light too
Both will have a mix of Indian and foreign cockpit displays and avionics, the Mig will have the Indian Topsight version, N-LCA possibly too.
So where is the advantage? Isn't it the fact, that a customised foreign fighter, like the Mig 29K, the MKI, or even better a co-developed one like FGFA is the best that we could have, since it offer all the main advantage of indigenous developments AND the high techs and capabilities we get from more capable countries and that we can't build on our own yet!
A naval AMCA wouldn't be better than Mig 29K or Rafale M because it's indigenous, but because it's a NG fighter, that's the reality that we have to see. Similarly, it's good to gain experience and know how with N-LCA MK1, but we need N-AMCA to defend ourselves against the threats of the future, not a "modest" 4.5 gen carrier fighter!